Li Jinxi
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (January 2021) |
Li Jinxi | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | March 27, 1978 | (aged 88)
Occupation(s) | Linguist, lexicographer, educator |
Li Jinxi (Chinese:
After that he held the positions of the Dean of the College of Arts of Beijing Normal College (now Beijing Normal University), Peking University, Yanjing University, the National Northwest Joint University (now Northwest University), Hunan University and Beijing Normal University as the president of Literary College.
After 1949, he became the president of the Chinese Language College of Beijing Normal University, a committee member of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a committee member of the Chinese Writing Reform Committee, and the standing committee of the Jiusan Society.
He devoted his life to studying and teaching language, studying Chinese grammar and Bopomofo (which originates to Zhang Binglin and Wu Zhihui).
Early life
[edit]Born into a scholarly family in Xiangtan, Hunan, China, Li was the oldest of the eight Li brothers.[1] He studied classic works from his childhood. He also learned poetry, painting, engraving and flute. From the age of 12, he began to write diaries, and never stopped in the following 70 years.[2]
In 1905, he passed the imperial examination at the county level and obtained a xiucai degree.[2] In 1906, he was admitted to the No.1 Middle School of Hunan Province (
He also compiled the Compilation Bureau of Hunan Province (
Academic contribution
[edit]Li Jinxi studied modern Chinese grammar theory, and advocated the Mandarin revolution. His book, New Chinese Grammar (
Li Jinxi wrote more than 300 papers and more than 30 books on languages, Chinese word-formation studies and modern Chinese grammar.
Relationship with Mao Zedong
[edit]Li met a young Mao Zedong (1893-1976) while working for a newspaper. Li would ask Mao to transcribe some manuscripts, but Mao refused.
Li Jinxi founded the Hunan Public Newspaper (
Decades later, Li Jinxi said, "When I was starting newspapers in Hunan, three young people helped transcribe manuscripts. The first one transcribed whatever he was given. The second one always gave his opinions whenever he found the wrong places of manuscripts. The third one would refuse to transcribe whenever he disagreed with the content. These three young men with different attitudes of transcribing manuscripts had their different achievements later. The first stayed unknown to the public. The second later became a famous writer, whose name was Tian Han. The third became a great man."[4]
In September, 1915, Li Jinxi went to Beijing for work and separated from Mao. By the year 1920, Mao Zedong had written to Li Jinxi six times.[5] He praised Li Jinxi for his learning ability. He said that Li Jinxi was a good friend and teacher with whom he could discuss knowledge. Li Jinxi also spoke highly of Mao Zedong. Several decades later, Li Jinxi took a great risk preserving the letters Chairman Mao gave him, and after the founding of the People's Republic of China (PRC), he handed over the letters as relics to the relevant department.[6]
After the founding of the PRC, Mao Zedong and Li Jinxi also met. Mao Zedong used to visit Li Jinxi’s home and engage in fruitful discussions. Later, because of security reasons, Mao Zedong had to invite Li Jinxi to Zhongnanhai, and conversed about education and language reform. Their relationship lasted 60 years until Mao's death in 1976.[citation needed]
Works
[edit]- New Chinese Grammar (
新著 国 语文法 ) Commercial Press 1924[7] - Mandarin Movement Survey (
国 语运动史纲) Commercial Press 1934[8] - Constructive "public language" Literature (
建 设的"大 众语"文学 ) Commercial Press 1936[8] - Phonetic Chinese characters (
注 音 汉字) Commercial Press 1936[8] - Mandarin Dictionary (
国 语辞典 ) Commercial Press 1937[8] - Phonetic Symbols and Simplified (
注 音符 号 与 简体字 ) Commercial Press 1937[9] - Chinese Grammar Tutorial (
中国 语法教程 ) Tianjin Public Press 1952[10]
References
[edit]- ^ Ming, Fengying (2018-11-24). "纪念|
黎 锦扬:美国 华人英文 写 作 开拓者 ,好 莱坞的 打 油 郎 ". The Paper. Retrieved 2018-11-25. - ^ a b c d e "Biography of Li Jinxi
黎 锦熙传略". CNKI. - ^ One of the Eight Linguists of the 20th century 20
世 纪现代 汉语语法八大家黎锦熙选集 东北师范大学 出版 社 季 羡林主 编 P2 - ^ Literature of Party, (
党 的 文献 ), 1999-03, Page 77. - ^ One of the Eight Linguists of the 20th century 20
世 纪现代 汉语语法八大家黎锦熙选集 东北师范大学 出版 社 季 羡林主 编 P460 - ^ One of the Eight Linguists of the 20th century 20
世 纪现代 汉语语法八大家黎锦熙选集 东北师范大学 出版 社 季 羡林主 编 P12 - ^ One of the Eight Linguists of the 20th century 20
世 纪现代 汉语语法八大家黎锦熙选集 东北师范大学 出版 社 季 羡林主 编 P466 - ^ a b c d One of the Eight Linguists of the 20th century 20
世 纪现代 汉语语法八大家黎锦熙选集 东北师范大学 出版 社 季 羡林主 编 P469 - ^ One of the Eight Linguists of the 20th century 20
世 纪现代 汉语语法八大家黎锦熙选集 东北师范大学 出版 社 季 羡林主 编 P470 - ^ One of the Eight Linguists of the 20th century 20
世 纪现代 汉语语法八大家黎锦熙选集 东北师范大学 出版 社 季 羡林主 编 P473
External links
[edit]- 1890 births
- 1978 deaths
- Linguists from China
- People from Xiangtan
- Educators from Hunan
- Academic staff of Peking University
- Academic staff of Yenching University
- Academic staff of Hunan University
- Presidents of Beijing Normal University
- Writers from Hunan
- Scientists from Hunan
- Linguists of Chinese
- Members of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Members of the Jiusan Society
- 20th-century linguists
- Chinese language reform