- John K. Fairbank
John King Fairbank (
24 May ,1907 -14 September 1991 ) was among the most prominent American scholars ofEast Asia in the twentieth century. His works have been translated into a number of languages, and, inChina , he is known mainly by his Chinese name Fei Zhengqing (Pinyin : Fèi Zhèngqīng; 费正清).Education and early career
Fairbank was born in
Huron, South Dakota on24 May ,1907 . He was educated atSioux Falls High School,Phillips Exeter Academy , theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison ,Harvard College , andOxford University (Balliol). In 1929, when he graduated from Harvard "summa cum laude ", he went to Oxford as aRhodes scholar in order to study British imperial history. At Oxford, Fairbank learned that theQing imperial archives were being opened, and he decided to go toBeijing to do research for his doctoral degree in 1932. In Beijing, he studied atTsinghua University under the direction of the prominent Chinese historianTsiang Tingfu . In 1936, Oxford awarded him aD.Phil. for his thesis on theChinese Imperial Maritime Customs . He returned to Harvard to take up a position teaching Chinese history.War service
Following the outbreak of the
Pacific War in 1941, Fairbank was enlisted to work for the US government, which included service in the OSS and theOffice of War Information . During the war, Fairbank also had the opportunity to visitChongqing , the temporary capital of Nationalist China. There, like most foreign observers, he witnessed the corruption of the government headed byChiang Kai-shek , which left a deeply negative impression of theKuomintang .McCarthy Era
After the end of the war, Fairbank returned to Harvard, where he resumed his teaching and research duties. In the debate on why the Nationalists had lost the Mainland to the Chinese Communists in 1949, Fairbank was briefly targeted for criticism of being "soft" on Communism, and in 1952, he testified before the
McCarran Committee . Ironically, many of Fairbank's Chinese friends and colleagues who returned toChina after 1949, such asFei Xiaotong andChen Han-seng , would later be attacked for being "pro-American".Return to academia
Fairbank remained at Harvard for the rest of his career and published a number of both academic and non-academic works on China, many of which would reach a wide audience outside academia. In 1948, he published his best-selling work "The United States and China", which would be republished in several editions. He also published an expanded revision of his doctoral dissertation as "Trade and Diplomacy on the China Coast" in 1953. Fairbank also trained a number of influential China historians at Harvard and worked hard to make Harvard a center for Chinese studies. He founded a center for research in East Asia, which was later named the Fairbank Center for East Asian Research in his honor.
In 1966, Fairbank and the
Sinologist Denis C. Twitchett , then atCambridge University set in motion the plans for the "Cambridge History of China". Originally intended to cover the entire history of China in six volumes, the project grew until it reached its present expected size of 15 volumes. Twitchett and Fairbank divided the history between them, with Fairbank editing the volumes on modern (post 1800) China, while Twitchett took responsibility for the period from the Qin to early Qing. Fairbank edited and wrote parts of volumes 10 through 15, the last of which appeared in the year after his death.Death
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