Published August 2025 | Version v1
Thesis Open

Multi-Level State-Building and Two strategies of Intellectual Subsumption in 1930s China: Towards a Synthetic Theory for the State-Intellectual Relationship

Creators

  • 1. University of Chicago

Contributors

Advisor:

Committee member:

Description

In the 1930s China, a nationwide social movement named the Rural Reconstruction Movement was thriving. The movement was initiated and participated in by multiple groups of intellectuals, who dedicated themselves to China's modernization project by improving rural populations' economic situation and civil consciousness in an independent-from-state stance. However, most of the intellectuals changed their attitudes in 1932, becoming a part of the political reform initiated by the central state. By conducting a comparative analysis between two most influential projects in the movement, respectively held in Hebei Province and Shandong Province, this article explains (1) How did the co-optation become possible, and why in 1932? (2) Why did different strategies of subsumption bring divergent outcomes for intellectuals (some of them gained more financial support and authorization from the provincial state, while others failed to)? In doing so, this article synthesizes two conventional theoretical models in the sociological studies of state-intellectual relationship, proposing a new theoretical framework that pays equal attention to intellectual's collective agency and structural position. Specifically, this article argues that: (1) Intellectuals' theoretical propositions inform their collective agency in a specific historical moment and shape their strategies. of subsumption during the co-optation in 1932. (2) The realization of intellectuals' agency was dependent upon the congruence between their agency and the demands of provincial states. When intellectuals' strategies of subsumption helped them satisfy provincial states' state-building demands, they were more likely to take advantage of the co-optation to realize their agency.

Files

Final Draft of MAPSS thesis_Di Wu.pdf

Files (940.0 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:d7f9c3c734138ab4883d36e43ef34e0f
940.0 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:15906

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Social Sciences Division
Department(s)
MA Program in the Social Sciences (MAPSS)