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  1. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hu_ShiHu Shi - Wikipedia

    Hu Shi [1] (胡適 T, 胡适 S, Hú Shì P; Jixi, 17 dicembre 1891 – Taipei, 24 febbraio 1962) è stato uno scrittore e diplomatico cinese

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hu_ShihHu Shih - Wikipedia

    Hu Shih [1] [2] [3] (Chinese: 胡適; 17 December 1891 – 24 February 1962) [a] was a Chinese diplomat, essayist and fiction writer, literary scholar, philosopher, and politician. Hu contributed to Chinese liberalism and language reform and advocated for the use of written vernacular Chinese. [6]

  3. Hu Shih was a Chinese Nationalist diplomat and scholar, an important leader of Chinese thought who helped establish the vernacular as the official written language (1922). He was also an influential propagator of American pragmatic methodology as well as the foremost political liberal in Republican.

  4. www.treccani.it › enciclopedia › hu-shih_(Enciclopedia-Italiana)Hu shih - Enciclopedia - Treccani

    Filosofo, scrittore e storico cinese, nato a Shanghai nel 1891. Negli Stati Uniti dal 1910 al 1917, vi studiò filosofia e letteratura inglese rimanendo soprattutto influenzato dalle teorie filosofiche di J. Dewey e letterarie di Amy Lowell.

  5. Scrittore cinese (Jixi, Anhui, 1891 - Taibei 1962). Poeta, filosofo, storico e critico letterario. Studiò a Shanghai e successivamente negli USA (1910-17). Fu tra i principali promotori della rivoluzione letteraria (1917) che rinnovò radicalmente la lingua scritta cinese.

  6. Hu Shi or Hu Shih (Traditional Chinese: 胡適; Simplified Chinese: 胡适; pinyin: Hú Shì, December 17, 1891—February 24 1962), born Hu Hongxing (胡洪騂), courtesy name was Shizhi (適之) was a Chinese philosopher and essayist who is widely recognized today as a key contributor to Chinese liberalism.

  7. c250.columbia.edu › c250_celebrates › remarkable_columbiansHu Shih - Columbia University

    A onetime cultural critic who became a leading figure in the emergence of modern China, Hu Shih rose to prominence by promoting the use of the vernacular in literature-a practice that earned him the title "father of the Chinese literary renaissance."