A Latterday Confucian: Reminiscences of William Hung (1893–1980)
by Susan Chan Egan
Harvard University Press, 1987 Cloth: 978-0-674-51297-9 Library of Congress Classification CT3990.H86E35 1987 Dewey Decimal Classification 951.040924
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
As a scholar, William Hung was instrumental in opening China’s rich documentary past to modern scrutiny. As an educator, he helped shape one of twentieth-century China’s most remarkable institutions, Yenching University. A member of the buoyant, Western-educated generation that expected to transform China into a modern, liberal nation, he saw his hopes darken as political turmoil, war with Japan, and the Communist takeover led to a different future. yet his influence was widespread; for his students became leaders on both sides of the Taiwan Strait, and he continued to teach in the United States through the 1970s.
In 1978, he began recalling his colorful life to Susan Chan Egan in weekly taping sessions. Egan draws on these tapes to let a skillful raconteur tell for himself anecdotes from his life as a religious and academic activist with a flair for the flamboyant. His reminiscences encompass the issues and dilemmas faced by Chinese intellectuals of his period. Among the notables who figured in his life and memories were Hu Shih, H. H. Kung, Henry Winter Luce, John Leighton Stuart, Timothy Lew, and Lu Chihwei.
While retaining the flavor of Hung’s reminiscences, Egan explains the evolution and importance of his scholarly work; captures his blend of Confucianism, mystical Christianity, and iconoclastic thought; and describes his effect on those around him. For it was finally his unyielding integrity and personal kindness as much as his accomplishments that caused him to be revered by colleagues and generations of students.
REVIEWS
A Latterday Confucian is…a superbly written and evocative intellectual biography in which William Hung’s reminiscences have been seamlessly woven into the author’s smooth narrative. Egan has excelled at vividly describing scenes, places, and people from Hung’s life.
-- Jon W. Huebner Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs
Relying on Hung’s near photographic memory, Egan’s lovingly presented life of Hung is like a prism that clarifies the as yet unresolved relations between traditions and modernity, between patriotism and revolution, between China and America.
-- Philip West Chinese Literature
The roster of scholars [William Hung] trained reads like a ‘who’s who’ of sinology. Susan Chan Egan, who spent numerous Sunday afternoons recording Hung’s reminiscences, has reconstructed his life in an engaging fashion.
-- Wei Peh T’i Far Eastern Economic Review
The sinological community is now most fortunate to have Susan Chan Egan’s excellent biography of this great and fascinating scholar… Egan frequently quotes [Hung’s] reminiscences at considerable length, giving her book the flavor of an autobiography and leaving the reader with a very strong sense of Professor Hung’s personality.
-- Stephen W. Durrant Journal of the American Oriental Society
A Latterday Confucian: Reminiscences of William Hung (1893–1980)
by Susan Chan Egan
Harvard University Press, 1987 Cloth: 978-0-674-51297-9
As a scholar, William Hung was instrumental in opening China’s rich documentary past to modern scrutiny. As an educator, he helped shape one of twentieth-century China’s most remarkable institutions, Yenching University. A member of the buoyant, Western-educated generation that expected to transform China into a modern, liberal nation, he saw his hopes darken as political turmoil, war with Japan, and the Communist takeover led to a different future. yet his influence was widespread; for his students became leaders on both sides of the Taiwan Strait, and he continued to teach in the United States through the 1970s.
In 1978, he began recalling his colorful life to Susan Chan Egan in weekly taping sessions. Egan draws on these tapes to let a skillful raconteur tell for himself anecdotes from his life as a religious and academic activist with a flair for the flamboyant. His reminiscences encompass the issues and dilemmas faced by Chinese intellectuals of his period. Among the notables who figured in his life and memories were Hu Shih, H. H. Kung, Henry Winter Luce, John Leighton Stuart, Timothy Lew, and Lu Chihwei.
While retaining the flavor of Hung’s reminiscences, Egan explains the evolution and importance of his scholarly work; captures his blend of Confucianism, mystical Christianity, and iconoclastic thought; and describes his effect on those around him. For it was finally his unyielding integrity and personal kindness as much as his accomplishments that caused him to be revered by colleagues and generations of students.
REVIEWS
A Latterday Confucian is…a superbly written and evocative intellectual biography in which William Hung’s reminiscences have been seamlessly woven into the author’s smooth narrative. Egan has excelled at vividly describing scenes, places, and people from Hung’s life.
-- Jon W. Huebner Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs
Relying on Hung’s near photographic memory, Egan’s lovingly presented life of Hung is like a prism that clarifies the as yet unresolved relations between traditions and modernity, between patriotism and revolution, between China and America.
-- Philip West Chinese Literature
The roster of scholars [William Hung] trained reads like a ‘who’s who’ of sinology. Susan Chan Egan, who spent numerous Sunday afternoons recording Hung’s reminiscences, has reconstructed his life in an engaging fashion.
-- Wei Peh T’i Far Eastern Economic Review
The sinological community is now most fortunate to have Susan Chan Egan’s excellent biography of this great and fascinating scholar… Egan frequently quotes [Hung’s] reminiscences at considerable length, giving her book the flavor of an autobiography and leaving the reader with a very strong sense of Professor Hung’s personality.
-- Stephen W. Durrant Journal of the American Oriental Society