# Wang Huiwu

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{{Short description|Chinese social reformer}}
{{family name hatnote|[Wang](/source/Wang_(surname))|lang=Chinese}}
{{Infobox person
| name        = Wang Huiwu
| image       = Wang Huiwu.jpg
| birth_name     =
| birth_date  = May 1898
| death_date  = 20 October 1993 (aged 95)
| birth_place = [Jiaxing](/source/Jiaxing), [Zhejiang](/source/Zhejiang), [China](/source/Qing_dynasty)
| death_place = [Beijing](/source/Beijing), [China](/source/China)
| death_cause = 
| spouse      = [Li Da](/source/Li_Da_(philosopher)) (divorced)  
| parents     = Wang Yanchen (father)
| children    = three, including [Li Xintian](/source/Li_Xintian_(psychologist))
| signature   =
}}
'''Wang Huiwu''' ({{zh|s=王会悟}}; May 1898{{spaced ndash}}20 October 1993) was a social reformer, a [Chinese Communist Party](/source/Chinese_Communist_Party) (CCP) women's organizer (in the early years), as well as a proponent of women's [emancipation](/source/feminism). She ran the first [Communist](/source/Communist)-sponsored journal which was written and edited mostly by women. Her husband was [Li Da](/source/Li_Da_(philosopher)) (1890–1966) one of the founders of CCP and a propagator of [Marxist Philosophy](/source/Marxist_Philosophy).<ref name="LanFong1999">{{cite book|last1=Lan|first1=Hua R.|author2=Vanessa L. Fong|title=Women in Republican China: a sourcebook|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wW0siteRm4gC&pg=PR|year=1999|publisher=M.E. Sharpe|isbn=978-0-7656-0342-5|page=xxxvii}}</ref><ref name="LeeStefanowska2003">{{cite book|author1=Lily Hsiao Hung Lee|author2=Agnes D. Stefanowska|author3=Sue Wiles|title=中國婦女傳記詞典|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XOGdnCPJSOMC&pg=PA534|year=2003|publisher=M.E. Sharpe|isbn=978-0-7656-0798-0|page=534}}</ref>

==Early life==
Wang was born in [Jiaxing County](/source/Jiaxing), [Zhejiang](/source/Zhejiang), [China](/source/Qing_dynasty),<ref name=LanFong1999 /> to a school teacher and his illiterate wife. Her father, Wang Yanchen (who owned the local school), provided her initial education. Her father's untimely death put the family in a penurious situation. However, she continued with her studies at the [Jiaxing Women's Normal School](/source/Jiaxing_Women's_Normal_School) and the [Hujun Academy for Girls](/source/Hujun_Academy_for_Girls), managed by [Christian Missionaries](/source/Christian_Missionaries), where she learned [English](/source/English_language) and became a [Christian](/source/Christians).<ref name="LeeStefanowska2003"/><ref name="Smith2000">{{cite book|last=Smith|first=Stephen Anthony|title=A Road Is Made: Communism in Shanghai, 1920-1927|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OF9h6b8tc6UC&pg=PA47|accessdate=26 April 2013|year=2000|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|isbn=978-0-8248-2314-6|pages=47–}}</ref> At Hujun, she participated in student protests against the [Paris Peace Conference](/source/Paris_Peace_Conference%2C_1919).<ref name="KruksRapp1989">{{cite book|last1=Kruks|first1=Sonia|last2=Rapp|first2=Rayna|last3=Young|first3=Marilyn Blatt|title=Promissory notes: women in the transition to socialism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tKfaAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=26 April 2013|date=1 April 1989|publisher=Monthly Review Press|isbn=978-0-85345-770-1|page=88}}</ref> It was at Hujun while she became fluent in English that she imbibed the iconoclasm of the [May Fourth Movement](/source/May_Fourth_Movement), which inspired her to spearhead the movement for women's emancipation.<ref name="LeeStefanowska2003"/>

After graduation, she moved to [Shanghai](/source/Shanghai) where her cousin, Shen Yanbing, later known as [Mao Dun](/source/Mao_Dun) (in later years one of the well known writers of China), introduced Wang to [Marxist](/source/Marxist)s. She married Li Da, a Marxist philosopher and feminist, who had returned from Japan after studies, in autumn of 1920; they shared an apartment with [Chen Duxiu](/source/Chen_Duxiu) and his wife, [Gao Junman](/source/Gao_Junman). Wang and Li moved to [Changsha](/source/Changsha) where they had a son (born 1924) and daughter (born 1925). After 1927, they lived in Shanghai and in [Beijing](/source/Beijing), and in July 1937 during the Japanese invasion of northern China, they escaped and lived in [Guilin](/source/Guilin) and [Guiyang](/source/Guiyang), before eventually arriving in [Chongqing](/source/Chongqing), the wartime capital of [Nationalist China](/source/Nationalist_government).<ref name="LeeStefanowska2003"/> They later divorced.<ref name=LanFong1999 />

==Career==
With Junman, Wang was the first woman activist in Shanghai's Communist organization.<ref name="Gilmartin1995">{{cite book|last=Gilmartin|first=Christina K|title=Engendering the Chinese Revolution: Radical Women, Communist Politics, and Mass Movements in the 1920s|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2XGufmHGm-cC&pg=PA17|accessdate=26 April 2013|year=1995|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-91720-0|pages=17–}}</ref> She and her husband who had a common interest in the  women's emancipation (both were known as May Fourth intellectuals) and together published a number of articles on the subject during post-[World War I](/source/World_War_I) period in popular periodicals.<ref name="LeeStefanowska2003"/> In 1921, she participated in the First Communist Party of the China National Congress, working as a guard.<ref name=wuzhen.com.cn>{{cite web|title=Wang Huiwu Memorial|url=http://www.wuzhen.com.cn/english/attractions_info.asp?nid=122|publisher=Wuzhen Tourism Company}}</ref> Wang established the Shanghai Commoners' (Pingmin) Girls' School in 1922,<ref name="Zarrow2005">{{cite book|last=Zarrow|first=Peter|title=China in War and Revolution, 1895-1949|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OCI3gnzsYc0C&pg=PA227|accessdate=26 April 2013|date=9 September 2005|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-0-203-01562-9|pages=227–}}</ref> (which attracted [Ding Ling](/source/Ding_Ling), [Qian Xijun](/source/Qian_Xijun), [Wang Jianhong](/source/Wang_Jianhong), and [Wang Yizhi](/source/Wang_Yizhi)). She was the editor of ''Women's Voice'' (''Funü Sheng''; 妇女声), a bimonthly periodical; which pioneered writings on politics by women. She also strongly supported the movement for birth control in spite of much male opposition.<ref name=LeeStefanowska2003 />

In 1949, she moved to Beijing following establishment of the [PRC](/source/PRC) and worked for the Legal Committee of the central government. She also participated in the 60th anniversary of the founding of CCP.<ref name="LeeStefanowska2003"/>

==Publications==
Wang's earliest publication on Women's emancipation was entitled "Chinese Woman Question: Liberation from a Trap" which was published in 1919 in the Young China; the theme of this book was on early traditional marriage custom all related to the dominant role of the husband in every aspect of his wife's life.<ref name="LeeStefanowska2003"/>

In 1949, when Wang went to Beijing, she published many essays reminiscing the founding of the CCP.<ref name="LeeStefanowska2003"/>

== Family ==
Wang and her husband Li Da had three children. Their eldest daughter, Li Xintián (李心田), died of an illness during the [Second Sino-Japanese War](/source/Second_Sino-Japanese_War). The second daughter was Li Xinyi (李心怡). Their only son was [Li Xintian](/source/Li_Xintian_(psychologist)) (李心天), a founder of [medical psychology](/source/medical_psychology) in China.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.thepaper.cn/newsDetail_forward_3390240|title=著名心理学家李心天逝世，系中国共产党早期领导人李达之子|last=Yue|first=Huairang|date=2019-05-03|website=The Paper|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2019-05-11}}</ref>

==Death and legacy==
In her final years, Wang was described as "frail and sickly", a result of years of hard labour.<ref name="Dangshi 1"/> Wang died on 20 October 1993, at her residence in Beijing, aged 96. The cause of death was sickness coupled with old age.<ref name="Dangshi 1">{{cite news|url=http://dangshi.people.com.cn/GB/85038/14224468.html |script-title=zh:李达的夫人王会悟 (2) |first=Xianzhe |last=Li |newspaper=Dangshi |date=March 24, 2011 |language=Chinese }}</ref> A memorial in honour of Wang's contribution to the cause of women in China was established at [Wuzhen](/source/Wuzhen), a World Heritage town, in northern [Zhejiang](/source/Zhejiang) Province.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.wuzhen.com.cn/english/attractions_info.asp?nid=122|title=Wang Huiwu Memorial|accessdate=27 April 2013|publisher=Wuzhen Tourism Co., Ltd}}</ref>

==References==
{{Reflist}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Wang, Huiwu}}
Category:1898 births
Category:1993 deaths
Category:Writers from Jiaxing
Category:Chinese editors
Category:Chinese women editors
Category:Chinese women essayists
Category:Chinese women's rights activists
Category:Chinese communists
Category:20th-century Chinese essayists
Category:Republic of China politicians from Zhejiang
Category:Chinese Communist Party politicians from Zhejiang
Category:Politicians from Jiaxing
Category:20th-century Chinese women writers
Category:Communist women writers
Category:People from Tongxiang

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Wang Huiwu](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang_Huiwu) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang_Huiwu?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
