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Shi Cuntong

Shi Cuntong
施存统
Shi Cuntong.jpg
First Secretary of the Chinese Communist Youth League
In office
May 1922 – August 1923
Personal details
Born 1899
Jinhua County, Zhejiang, Flag of the Qing Dynasty (1889-1912).svgQing Dynasty
Died 29 November 1970
Beijing,  People's Republic of China
Occupation Politician

Shi Cuntong (simplified Chinese: 施存统; traditional Chinese: 施存統; pinyin: Shī Cúntǒng; 1899 – 29 November 1970), also known as Shi Fuliang (simplified Chinese: 施复亮; traditional Chinese: 施複亮; pinyin: Shī Fùliàng) was an academician and an early leader of the Communist Party of China.

Born in 1899 in Zhejiang, he enrolled into the Zhejiang First Provincial Normal School in 1917. Following the May Fourth Movement in 1919, he participated in the founding of the magazine "Zhejiang New Trends", and received recognition for his essay "Non-filial" that was published in its 2nd issue regarding the closed family culture of Chinese society. He traveled to Beijing in 1920 to pursuit his anti-government agenda but returned to Shanghai after a few months. When he returned, he met up with the editor of "New Youth" Chen Duxiu upon the liaison from Yu Xiusong, taking up the Marxist ideology and joining the Communist Party of China as one of her founding members. In August 1920, he participated in the founding of the Chinese Communist Youth League, and established the Tokyo Marxist Study Group whilst he was away in Japan for further studies.

However, he was expelled in 1922 and he came back to attend the 2nd National Congress. In the same year, he was elected as the First Secretary of the Chinese Communist Youth League. In January 1924, he left the Central Committee to become the CPC's Chairman for the Shanghai Region, and taught at Shanghai University, Zhongshan University, Whompoa Military Academy and Guangzhou Peasant Movement Institute. At the beginning of 1927 he was the policitcal director at the Central Military and Political School of Wuhan. Following the Shanghai massacre of 1927 and the KMT-CPC split, Shi left the Communist Party. The systematic killing of communist leaders and the breakdown of the communist movement in Shanghai were precipitating factors that made Shi denounce his party membership.


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