By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Financial Magazine: Your Key to Wealth PROFinancial Magazine: Your Key to Wealth PROFinancial Magazine: Your Key to Wealth PRO
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • World
    • UK
      • UK Companies
      • UK Economy
      • UK Politics
    • US
    • China
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • Emerging Markets
    • Europe
    • Americas
    • Australia & NZ
    • Middle East & North Africa
      • Iran
      • Israel – Hamas war
    • War in Ukraine
  • US
    • US Companies
    • US Economy
    • US Politics & Policy
  • Companies
    • Album
    • Energy
    • Financials
    • Health
    • Industrials
    • Media
    • Professional Services
    • Retail & Consumer
    • Tech Sector
    • Telecoms
    • Transport
  • Tech
    • Artificial intelligence
    • Semiconductors
    • Cyber Security
    • Social Media
  • Markets
    • Alphaville
    • Capital Markets
    • Commodities
    • Cryptofinance
    • Currencies
    • Equities
    • ETF Hub
    • Fund Management
    • Trading
      • Trade Secrets
    • Markets Data
    • Moral Money
  • Climate
    • Opinion
    • Letters
    • Lex
    • Obituaries
  • Work & Careers
    • Business Books
    • Business Education
    • Business School Rankings
    • Business Travel
    • Entrepreneurship
  • Life & Arts Home
    • Arts
    • Books
    • House & Home
    • Food & Drink
    • Style
    • Travel
  • HTSI
  • My Financial
    • FW Magazine
    • FW Globetrotter
    • FW Podcasts
    • FW Recomment
    • FW Schools
    • FW Wealth
    • The FW View
Reading: Isabel Crook, anthropologist and chronicler of China’s communist revolution, 1915-2023
Share
Font ResizerAa
Financial Magazine: Your Key to Wealth PROFinancial Magazine: Your Key to Wealth PRO
Search
  • Home
    • Financial Magazine: Your Key to Wealth PRO
  • Categories
  • Bookmarks
    • My Bookmarks
  • More Foxiz
    • Blog Index
    • Sitemap
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Home » Blog » Isabel Crook, anthropologist and chronicler of China’s communist revolution, 1915-2023
ObituariesOpinion

Isabel Crook, anthropologist and chronicler of China’s communist revolution, 1915-2023

admin
Last updated: December 15, 2024 9:39 am
admin Published December 15, 2024
Share
SHARE

A sympathetic westerner who became a participant-observer as the country transformed

“Over the last 100 years, I have witnessed two world wars, two revolutions, a number of mass movements.” So wrote Isabel Crook, who devoted her life to observing — and participating in — the making of modern China.

The daughter of Canadian Methodist missionaries in China, Crook documented the waning of the Kuomintang regime and the rise of the Communist party through the lives of villagers in rural China. The writer was a rare bridge between the west and China, with a longer lived experience of the country than most of its leaders.

Crook, who has died at the age of 107 in Beijing, was born in 1915 in Chengdu, the capital of the southwestern province of Sichuan. She attended Christian schools in the city, before leaving to study anthropology at the University of Toronto.

Immediately after graduation in 1939, she returned to southwestern China and carried out research in a village near Chongqing, the provisional capital where the Kuomintang government had retreated after the Japanese invasion. There, she studied 1,500 households as part of a rural reconstruction project funded by the National Christian Council of China.

“Banditry was endemic,” she wrote, describing how she and her collaborator Yu Xiji would set off for house visits armed with sticks to beat off guard-dogs. But as young women in their early twenties, they were seen as non-threatening and were eventually welcomed by the villagers.

Crook chronicled intimate moments of village life, from the responses of citizens to the state’s attempts to reform marriage and legalise divorce, to their efforts to avoid conscription. Crook later published their observations as a book: Prosperity’s Predicament: Identity, Reform, and Resistance in Rural Wartime China.

While in Chengdu, Isabel met David Crook, a British communist who had initially arrived in China as a Soviet spy but became disillusioned with Stalinism over the course of his stay. She was inspired by his politics and he by her audaciousness — a mutual male friend described Isabel as “nice, but frankly, so much character scares the hell out of me.” The pair moved to London, where they married in 1942. Soon after, Isabel joined the London School of Economics’ anthropology department.

The Crooks returned to China to document the Communist party’s gaining of territory from the Kuomintang. As Isabel puts it, this was the “beginning of [her] role as a participant-observer of the Chinese Communist Revolution”. They published their writings as Ten Mile Inn: Mass Movement in a Chinese Village.

On October 1 1949, the couple witnessed the founding of the People’s Republic of China in Tiananmen Square in Beijing. They settled in the capital, and taught English at what became the country’s top languages university, the Beijing Foreign Studies University. She gave birth to her three sons in the city.

Crook stayed at BFSU until her retirement, her tenure only interrupted by the Cultural Revolution, which arrived in 1966. The duo joined a couple of the factions on campus and were, in David’s words, “carried along by the revolutionary storm”.

David was seized and jailed for five years by a group of student Red Guards, some of whom had been his friends at the university; Isabel was detained on the campus for three years. Their interrogators played their testimonies off against each other, trying to prove their dishonesty as traitors to communism. After their release, they were both rehabilitated, and went on to witness the national mourning that followed Mao Zedong’s death in 1976.

The Crooks’ life-long commitment to communism was often tested by the way the party centralised and wielded its authority. Seeing their students mobilise for the 1989 pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square, the Crooks wrote to the state media urging the government not to use force.

At a banquet given by senior officials in 1990, David criticised the bloodshed of the June 4th massacre, but ended his speech pledging their life-long devotion to China — a narrative that, as foreigners, placed the Crooks beyond political reproach.

Despite their criticisms of the state, the Crooks remain highly celebrated by the government. David died in 2000, but in 2019, Isabel became one of 10 people to receive the Friendship Medal, created by President Xi Jinping as China’s highest honour for foreigners.

Crook lived to see the end of the Chinese communist era that had so inspired her, and Beijing’s embrace of capitalism. But through it all, the Communist party’s tight grip on power continued unabated.

Source: Financial Times

You Might Also Like

Here’s why Tennesseans should reject United Auto Workers tactics to organize workers

Financial ingredients for the ‘sandwich generation’

Repeat after me: building any new homes reduces housing costs for all

Daniel Kahneman, Nobel Prize-winning psychologist, 1934-2024

Apple/iPhone: Pro model will add bite to sales in China

Share This Article
Facebook X Email Print
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
XFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow

Weekly Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
[mc4wp_form]
Popular News
USWork & CareersWorld

The downsides of upskilling programmes

admin admin December 15, 2024
Jennifer Crumbley issues warning during her sentencing
Nobel-winning novelist Abdulrazak Gurnah: ‘I had no other place to go’
US transfers thousands of seized Iranian guns, rocket launchers and munitions to Ukraine
UK public borrowing comes in lower than forecast
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image
Global Coronavirus Cases

Confirmed

0

Death

0

More Information:Covid-19 Statistics
Support
  • Help Centre
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Accessibility
  • Careers
  • Suppliers
Legal & Privacy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Manage Cookies
  • Copyright
  • Policies & Statements
Sections
  • Help Centre
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Accessibility
  • Careers
  • Suppliers

Subscribe US

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

[mc4wp_form]
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
My Financial World
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?