{{Short description|Newspaper in Shanghai, China}} {{For|the Chinese automobile|Senova}} {{Infobox newspaper | name = 申報 (formerly 申江新報)<br />Shanghai News (Shen Pao) | image = 申报创刊号.jpg | image_size = 180px | caption = | type = Commercial Newspaper | format = | owners = Ernest Major, Shi Liangcai, Norwood Allman | publisher = | editor = {{QING}} Jiang Zhixiang, He Guisheng, Qian Xinbo, Huang Shiquan

{{ROC}} Chen Leng, Zhang Yunhe, Norwood Allman | chief_editor = | associate_editor = | staff_writers = | founded = {{start date and age|1872|4|30|df=y}} | ceased_publication = {{start date and age|1949|5|27|df=y}} | political_position = Conservatism | language = Chinese | price = | headquarters = Songjiang, Shanghai, Qing empire<br/> Shanghai, China | circulation = | ISSN = | website = | founder = Ernest Major }} {{Infobox Chinese|title=''Shen Bao''|s={{linktext|申|报}}|t={{linktext|申|報}}|p=Shěn Bào|w=Shên<sup>3</sup>-Pao<sup>4</sup>|gr=Shen Baw|bpmf=ㄕㄣㄅㄠˋ}} {{Conservatism in China|Media}} '''''Shen Bao''''' ({{lang-zh|t=申報|p=Shēn Bào}}), officially transliterated as '''''Shun Pao''''' or '''''Shen-pao''''', known in English as '''''Shanghai News''''', was a newspaper published from 1872 to 1949 in Shanghai, China. The name is short for ''Shenjiang Xinbao'', Shenjiang being a short form of Chunshen Jiang, the old name for the Huangpu River.<ref>Endymion Wilkinson, ''Chinese History: A Manual, Revised and Enlarged'' (Harvard University Asia Center, 2000: {{ISBN|0-674-00249-0}}), p. 967.</ref>

The influence of the newspaper in early 20th century Shanghai was such that ''Shen Bao zhi'', literally "Shen-pao paper", became a generic term for newspaper or newsprint.<ref>蔣遵和 (Jiang Zunhe), ''[http://big5.eastday.com:82/gate/big5/auto.eastday.com/epublish/gb/paper451/2/class045100001/hwz1311405.htm “拿張申報紙來”是什麼意思]'' {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141129071608/http://big5.eastday.com:82/gate/big5/auto.eastday.com/epublish/gb/paper451/2/class045100001/hwz1311405.htm |date=2014-11-29 }} (What does "bring a sheet of Shen Pao paper mean"?), Shanghai Municipal Archives (re-published by EastDay).</ref>

== Formation == Founded by Ernest Major (1841–1908),<ref>Dates from Roberta Wue, "The Profits of Philanthropy: Relief Aid, Shenbao, and the Art World in Later 19th-century Shanghai," ''Late Imperial China'' 25 (June 2004), pp. 187-211.</ref> a British businessman, in 1872, ''Shen Bao'' was one of the first modern Chinese newspapers. Major's Chinese language skills had been considered "legendary" and with the investment of four other Britons, he began managing ''Shen Bao''. He was committed to bettering China by adopting Western Institutions and running a profitable business. When Major returned to England in 1889, the newspaper was reorganized and owned by Major Company Limited.<ref>Chinese History Research Site at UCSD, [http://libraries.ucsd.edu/chinesehistory/miscellaneous_sources.htm Miscellaneous Sources]{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}.</ref>

Because ''Shen Bao'' was based and published out of the Shanghai International Settlement, it was subject to fewer regulations compared to many other Chinese newspapers. The International Settlement was governed by the Shanghai Municipal Council which was completely separate from the Qing court and foreign consulate. The freedom of press granted in the International Settlement in Shanghai was "even greater than that enjoyed by British papers in London itself". (Wagner, 4) Because of this lack of state regulation, Shen Bao was considered a reliable and independent source of information and "had acquired the reputation of being more independent and more reliable than most of the other available sources" (Wagner, 5). Chinese officials considered foreign journalists to be "infinitely more credible, reliable and honest than their own countrymen". (Wagner, 19) Major specifically adopted an editorial policy geared toward improving China's long-term growth and development.

To further grow the business and establish itself as a "public forum in China" Shen Bao regularly reprinted essays from Xunhuan ribao in Hong Kong and the Jingbao announcements from the government. Furthermore, ''Shen Bao'' frequently published the essays of great reformist publicist Liang Qichao who has been "hailed as the father of modern Chinese journalism". Although he did not invent the new newspaper style in the 1890s, he is said to have perfected it. (Judge, 235)

Major differentiated himself from other foreign newspaper publishers in two areas. First, from the outset, he made it clear that the new newspaper would be for Chinese readers, and thus that it would emphasize news and issues of interest to Chinese, not foreigners. Secondly, he put Chinese compradors in charge of running the business and let Chinese editors pick news items and write editorials. These two methods proved very effective. While the Chinese compradors used their knowledge of and connections with the local community to raise circulation and attract advertisements, they kept the price of the paper lower than that of its competitor. Simultaneously, Chinese editors did a better job of making ''Shen Bao'' appeal to Chinese readers' taste. Within one year, ''Shen Bao'' had put ''Shanghai Xinbao'' out of business and become the only Chinese newspaper in Shanghai until the appearance of ''Xin Bao'' in 1876 and ''Hu Bao'' in 1882.<ref>Yongming Zhou, ''Historicizing Online Politics: Telegraphy, the Internet, and Political Participation in China'' (Stanford University Press, 2006: {{ISBN|0-8047-5128-5}}), p. 45.</ref>

== Role in public opinion == ''Shen Bao'' played a pivotal role in the formation of public opinion in the late 19th century. An example is its campaign in its first years against the new practice of employing young women as waitress in opium dens, which "blurred the demarcation line between acceptable and unacceptable practices by putting waitresses in the ambiguous position of implicitly providing sex services in the opium dens. Worse still, the opium dens embracing this practice were mostly located in the French Concession, connecting the issue to the presence of foreigners in Shanghai."<ref>Zhou, ''Historicizing Online Politics'', p. 50.</ref> As a result of the uproar, the practice was banned (although in practice not eradicated).

''Shen Bao'' also reflected the changing attitudes towards women as a new audience group - how the newspaper "described them in advertisements, editorials ad news reports".{{quote without source|date=March 2021}} Women became a group that could be considered: adverts were directed at the feminine reading public. Newspaper was able to address women directly but also prescribed new feminine roles.{{citation needed|date=March 2021}} This new role gave rise to the acceptance of public female schooling.{{citation needed|date=March 2021}}

Along with ''Yishibao'', ''Dagongbao'', and ''Mingguoribao'' (a Nationalist daily), ''Shen Bao'' is regarded as one of the "four great newspapers of the Republican period".<ref name=":04">{{Cite book |last=Wong |first=Stephanie M. |title=Making Catholicism Chinese: the Catholic Church in a Modernizing China |date=2025 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-762369-5 |location=New York, NY, United States of America}}</ref>{{Reference page|page=132}}

== Impact on Chinese society == The newspaper "innovated in printing technology, the use of the telegraph, the employment of a military correspondent (sent to cover the Sino-French War in Vietnam in 1884), and the use of the vernacular (''baihua'')";<ref>Wilkinson, ''Chinese History'', p. 967.</ref> it quickly established a reputation as one of the best in China, coming under Chinese ownership in 1909,<ref>Wilkinson, ''Chinese History'', p. 968.</ref> and by the early 20th century was printing 30,000 copies a day, 9,000 circulated in Shanghai and the rest elsewhere in China.<ref>Mary Ninde Gamewell, ''New Life Currents in China'' (Missionary Education Movement of the United States and Canada, 1919), pp. 162-163.</ref> "By the early 1920s its circulation was 50,000; by the end of the decade 100,000; and by the mid 1930s, 150,000."<ref>Wilkinson, ''Chinese History'', p. 995.</ref> ''Shen Bao'' was also notably a part of the commercialization of the Chinese press in the 1930s that prioritized advertising and mass circulation. (MacKinnon, 9) The paper's offices were in the International Settlement, "about a block away from the Central Police Station."<ref>Harriet Sergeant, ''Shanghai: Collision Point of Cultures 1918-1939'' (Crown, 1991: {{ISBN|0-517-57025-4}}), p. 162.</ref> In its early period, it had eight pages, with news, essays, and advertisements as well as imperial decrees and memorials. "Because the editorial policies followed the principle of 'reporting whatever possible and letting the readers determine the truth,' many interesting but unfounded rumors were often included as news." After 1905, it increased its size to 20 pages.<ref name="libraries.ucsd.edu">[http://libraries.ucsd.edu/chinesehistory/ Chinese History Research Site at UCSD]{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, Miscellaneous Sources.</ref>

''Shen Bao'' also became a conduit between the high and low society, connecting the two in a way that was largely unprecedented. The court was the loudest and most continuous voice in the public sphere and continued to be with the publication of newspapers. The ''Shen Bao'' contained sections of reprints from the ''Peking Gazette,'' as well as articles responding to official news from the ''Gazette''. ''Shen Bao'' allowed "those below" to speak out about their opinions and criticism anonymously or in person. The publication of the ''Peking Gazette'' not only increased circulation of important official news, but also gave a platform for public discussion of important issues between classes. ''Shen Bao'' published multiple editorials from opposite ends of the spectrum - sometimes even within the same issue.<ref name=":0" />

== Political affiliation and effects == ''Shen Bao'' was founded as a commercial newspaper, and politically it remained conservative for its first three decades, supporting the Qing government. In 1905 it began to change its orientation, quoting Liang Qichao's constitutionalist slogans on New Year's Day; in 1907 it was sold to Xi Zipei (1867–1929),<ref>Dates from Ellen Widmer, "[http://lucian.uchicago.edu/blogs/premoderneastasia/files/2009/01/widmer_jan-20.doc The Saoye shanfang of Suzhou and Shanghai: An Evolution in Five Stages]{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}" [Word document]; Xi's name in Chinese is 希子佩.</ref> its former comprador, who "owned Shanghai's best-capitalized publishing operation, Zhongguo tushu gongsi (Chinese Library Company)"<ref>Christopher A. Reed, ''Gutenberg in Shanghai: Chinese Print Capitalism, 1876-1937'' (University of Hawaii Press, 2004: {{ISBN|0-8248-2833-X}}), p. 174.</ref> and was under the influence of Zhang Jian, and it became a moderately liberal newspaper that strongly supported the constitutional movement.<ref>Mary Clabaugh Wright, ''China in Revolution: The First Phase, 1900-1913'' (Yale University Press, 1971: {{ISBN|0-300-01460-0}}), p. 157.</ref> "It had the following sections: editorials, international news, domestical news, local news, industry and trade, law and society, sports and education, literature and art, and advertisements. In addition to reporting important political news stories, it had many special columns and supplements such as ''Ziyoutan'' (free discussion), automobile, education and life."<ref name="libraries.ucsd.edu"/> In 1912 control was transferred to Shi Liangcai. "In the 1930s, Shi was a strong supporter of the Human Rights Defence Alliance established by Madam Soong Qing Ling, the second wife of revolutionary leader Dr Sun Yat-sen, with Cai Yuanpei and Lu Xun."<ref>Patsy Yang and Jolin Ng, "[http://live.shanghaidaily.com/column_detail.asp?type=column&id=129 Cheers for favorite old bars and some newbies in Tongren Road] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716200018/http://live.shanghaidaily.com/column_detail.asp?type=column&id=129 |date=2011-07-16 }}," ''Shanghai Daily'', July 13, 2009.</ref>

There is some scholarly debate of the role of ''Shen Bao'' in igniting revolutionary and nationalist sentiments; however, it is generally regarded that "newspapers at most echoed, rather than produced, revolutionary or national feelings. Instead of making revolutions, it was made by them" (Judge 247). "[The press] was not merely a record of what happened but and ingredient in the happening".

== End of publication == Due to the surveillance from Chiang Kai-Shek on the press, ''Shen Bao'' and other newspapers were frequently censored using postal bans for one day when they criticized government policy too strongly. Most of the time this was an effective enough deterrent, however, in July 1932, a warning was sent that the postal ban would not be lifted until ''Shen Bao'' fulfilled the following government requests: First, stop publishing editorials about the government's "bandit suppression" campaigns, dismiss three of the most critical editorial writers, and allow the government to appoint a new member to the editorial staff. (Mackinnon, 16). ''Shen Bao'' fulfilled all but the latter request.

In 1934, the newspaper "incurred the government's anger because of its strong anti-Japanese attitude. On November 13, Shih Liang-ts'ai, its owner and editor-in-chief, was mysteriously assassinated on the Shanghai-Hangchow Highway";<ref>Lee-hsia Hsu Ting, Government Control of the Press in Modern China, 1900-1949 (Harvard University Asia Center, 1975: {{ISBN|0-674-35820-1}}), p. 97.</ref> responsibility for his murder has been attributed to the Bureau of Investigation and Statistics, Chiang Kai-shek's much-feared secret police.<ref>John K. Fairbank and Albert Feuerwerker, eds., ''The Cambridge History of China, Vol. 13: Republican China 1912-1949, Part 2'' (Cambridge University Press, 1986: {{ISBN|0-521-24338-6}}), p. 144.</ref><ref>Frederic E. Wakeman, ''Spymaster: Dai Li and the Chinese Secret Service'' (University of California Press, 2003: {{ISBN|0-520-23407-3}}), pp. 179ff.</ref> In 1938, with the city under Japanese control, Norwood Allman (1893–1987), an American lawyer who had been U.S. Consul in Shanghai in the early 1920s, was asked by the paper's Chinese owners to take over as editor; ''Time'' wrote in 1940: "A fluent Chinese linguist, Allman reads every story that goes into Shun Pao, writes editorials, corrects editorials written by staff members. He serves without pay."<ref>''Time'', "[https://web.archive.org/web/20101014074936/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,764271,00.html Foreign News: New Order in Shanghai]," July 29, 1940.</ref> The paper was on bad terms with the Japanese, and in 1940 a Chinese assistant editor was killed and his head left on the street as a warning to journalists.<ref>Paul French, ''Carl Crow, a Tough Old China Hand: The Life, Times, and Adventures of an American in Shanghai'' (Hong Kong University Press, 2007: {{ISBN|962-209-802-9}}), p. 212.</ref>

After the murder of Shih Liang-ts'ai, the paper lost circulation and became less radical in its criticism of the Kuomintang. (MacKinnon, 11) Allman had control over the paper until December 1941 when it was seized by the Japanese on the ground that it was an American company. Allman had incorporated it as an American company purposefully to limit his financial liability. (Chin, 5) The Japanese appointed Chen Binhe ({{lang|zh-hant|陳彬龢}}), a former Shen bao editor-in-chief who gained the trust of the Japanese, as the new president of Shen bao. (Chin, 6) "As a result, [of these new appointments] Shen bao became a mouthpiece and propaganda tool for mobilizing the Chinese masses politically, economically, and culturally for total war" (Chin, 9).

During World War II the paper passed into the hands of collaborators with the Japanese occupation, but after the war Pan Gongzhan, an influential Kuomintang party official who had been an editor on the paper in the late 1920s,<ref>Xiaoqun Xu, ''Chinese Professionals and the Republican State: The Rise of Professional Associations in Shanghai, 1912-1937'' (Cambridge University Press, 2001: {{ISBN|0-521-78071-3}}), p. 171.</ref> became its publisher and Chen Shunyü its chief editor. In May 1949, when the People's Liberation Army took Shanghai, the newspaper was shut down.

There is a complete collection of the paper's issues in the Shanghai Library.<ref>Min Wu, "[http://www.reference-global.com/doi/abs/10.1515/9783598440205.4.173 Newspapers in the Shanghai Library]," ''International Newspaper Librarianship for the 21st Century'', p. 173.</ref>

==Literary magazine== Ernest Major's brother Frederick founded a literary magazine ''Yinghuan suoji'' (瀛寰瑣記; "Random Sketches of the World"), published by the ''Shen Bao'' since November 1872.<ref name=":0">{{cite book |last=Mittler |first=Barbara |title=Joining the Global Public: Word, Image, and City in Early Chinese Newspapers, 1870–1910 |publisher=State University of New York Press |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-7914-7117-3 |editor-last=Wagner |editor-first=Rudolf |page=16 |chapter=Domesticating an Alien Medium: Incorporating the Western-style Newspaper into the Chinese Public Sphere |authorlink=Rudolf G. Wagner}}</ref> The magazine printed fiction, essays and poetry.<ref>{{cite book|last=Wang|first=David Der-wei|authorlink=David Der-wei Wang|title=Fin-de-siècle Splendor: Repressed Modernities of Late Qing Fiction, 1849–1911|year=1997|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=0-8047-2845-3|page=2}}</ref>

==See also== {{Portal|China|Journalism}} *{{section link|History of newspapers and magazines|China}} * ''North China Daily News'' * ''Shanghai Evening Post and Mercury'' * ''Der Ostasiatischer Lloyd'' * ''Shanghai Jewish Chronicle'' * ''Deutsche Shanghai Zeitung'' * [https://visualizingcultures.mit.edu/dianshizhai_02/dsz2_intro.html Shanghai's Lens on the News (text and translations) on MIT Visualizing Cultures website] * Catherine Vance Yeh, "[https://www.academia.edu/28100366/Recasting_the_Chinese_Novel_Ernest_Major_s_Shenbao_Publishing_House_1872_1890_?email_work_card=abstract-read-more Recasting the Chinese Novel: Ernest Major's Shenbao Publishing House (1872-1890)]", ''Transcultural Studies'' 2015.1, pp.&nbsp;171–289.

==References== {{Reflist|2}}

==External links== *[https://web.archive.org/web/20110719181734/http://icon.crl.edu/detail.php?language=Chinese&country=&title=&oclcno=&begindate=&institution=&sort=begindate&sortOrder=ASC&item=-1&recIndex=6&recCount=817 ICON] (International Coalition on Newspapers) listing

{{Authority control}}

Category:Newspapers established in 1872 Category:Newspapers published in Shanghai Category:1872 establishments in China Category:Newspapers disestablished in 1949 Category:1949 disestablishments in China Category:Defunct newspapers published in China Category:Conservatism in China Category:Conservative media