Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 308
978-0-8476-9015-2 • Paperback • October 1998 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
978-1-4616-4230-5 • eBook • October 1998 • $73.00 • (£56.00)
Edward S. Krebs is an independent scholar and translator based in Georgia.
Chapter 1 Daring to Die: A Life of Shifu
Chapter 2 Anarchism in Europe and in China: Themes Reasserted and Themes Adapted
Chapter 3 Assassination and Radical Ideology: Liu Sifu's Route to Anarchism
Chapter 4 Liu's Prison Essays
Chapter 5 Return to Assassination
Chapter 6 Socialism Narrow and Broad: Shifu's Comrade-Rivals in the Early Republic
Chapter 7 The New Beginning: Shifu Launches the Conscience Society at Guangzhou
Chapter 8 Renewal at Shanghai: The Culmination of Shifu's Career
Chapter 9 Shifu's Legacy: Anarchism in the New Culture Years
Chapter 10 Shifting Ground, Slippery Footing: Anarchists versus Communists and Nationalists During the 1920s
Chapter 11 Conclusion: Shifu, Whole-Souled Anarchist
Fascinating. . . . Dying early, Shifu never faced the choice of those colleagues who lived on, most of whom eventually had to choose sides between the Guomingdang and the Chinese Communist Party. Because of his early death, his ideas and his reputation have come down to us relatively unsullied, although somewhat ignored. This book provides a valuable service in reacquainting many with Shifu's life and putting his ideas in perspective.
— Lee Feigon, Colby College; American Historical Review
This book eminently deserves reading as an important source for our understanding of Chinese anarchism and early socialism in China. It explores in considerable detail the human dimension as well as the depth of thought of the historical figures with whom it is concerned. In doing so, it assists us to appreciate the complex but uniterrupted search for wholeness of spirit in Chinese culture.
— Yasuko Shin-Nakagawa, Australian National University; Journal of Asian Studies
Edward Krebs . . . has added a lively and highly readable biography of Shifu (1884-1915) to the growing literature on Chinese anarchism. . . . Its theses are well argued and supported. The writing is clear, elegant, and from the heart. . . . Krebs achieves a fine balance between touching tribute and dispassionate evaluation of Shifu's strengths and weaknesses.
— Gregor Benton, University of Wales, Cardiff; China Quarterly