Ninkovich Rockefeller Foundation
Ninkovich Rockefeller Foundation
Ninkovich Rockefeller Foundation
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The Rockefeller
Foundation,
China,
and CulturalChange
FrankNinkovich
Foundation Archives; Donald Fisher, "American Philanthropy and the Social Sciences: The
Reproductionof a Conservative Ideology," in Philanthropyand Cultural Imperialism, ed. Arnove,
238-39. For social control as "a central theoretical thrust" of sociologists by 1920, see Morris
SocietalChangeandPoliticsin America(Chicago,1978),39.
TheLastHalf-Century:
Janowitz,
22 Henry van Wesep, notes of informalmeeting of Rockefellertrustees,officers,and directorsat
Princeton,Oct. 28-30, 1930, box 22, series 900, RG 3, RockefellerFoundation Archives.
The Rockefeller
Foundationand China 809
to Gunn, June 25, 1935, box 12, ibid.; John B. Grant interview by Saul Benison, 1960-1961,
transcript,pp. 350-52, Columbia Oral History Collection (Columbia University, New York).
Fosdick somewhat disingenuously discusses the experimentunder the heading of "Agriculture."
Fosdick, StoryoftheRockefeller Foundation,183-84.
26 China Program Progress Report, July 1, 1935-Feb. 15, 1937, box 13, series 601, RG 1.1,
RockefellerFoundation Archives; JohnB. Grant to Gunn, Oct. 25, 1934, box 2, ibid.;reportof the
Committee on Appraisal and Plan, Trustees' Conference, Dec. 11, 1934, box 24, series 900, RG 3,
ibid. Peter Buck argues that Americans were faced with a choice between socially irrelevant
science or scientificallyirrelevantsocial programs,either of which would ensure some formof
Chinese backwardness. The rural reconstruction program, by blending science, reform, and
politics, was designed to overcome that dilemma. Buck, AmericanScienceand ModernChina,
220.
TheRockefeller
Foundation
andChina 811
Mayling Soong Chiang [Madame Chiang Kai-shek] to Gunn, Feb. 5, 1937, copy in box 12, ibid.;
Thomson, While China Faced West, 152-60.
Foundationand China
The Rockefeller 813
endofthe Chinaprogram.Atfirst,theeffects
effective ofthewarwerenotall
negative,forthe transfer ofthemajorNationalistinstitutions to westernand
southwestern China providedopportunities as well as setbacks,especiallyfor
Yen's organization.It directedcompletepoliticalrestructuringsin Hunan and
Szechwan,and the establishment ofa school ofpublicadministration further
strengthened its connectionwith the government.One of the foundation
representativeson the scene even arguedthattheMass EducationMovement
was now in a position "to lay the foundationfor a reformedpolitical
system. "32
That view turnedout to be wishfulthinking.Overall,as Gunn acknowl-
edgedto Fosdick,theoutlookforthe China programwas "prettywretched."
Because theexperimental fieldareasoftheNCCRR werein thewarzones,all
fieldworkhad to be relocatedand startedafresh.More seriously,theuniver-
sities,whichformedthe institutionalcoreofthe program, wereeitherunder
Japanesecontrolorhad been forced,withall theattendantdisorganization, to
relocate.Even assumingcontainmentof the conflictand continuedNation-
alistinterestand funding,relocationandreorganization underwartimecondi-
tionscould accomplishrelativelylittle.Problemsofdistance,transportation,
and communicationwere great enough effectively to bury the idea of a
programbased on cooperatingeducationaland politicalinstitutions.Aftera
periodof oscillationbetweendespairand renewedhopes of success,by 1939
the NCCRR was clearly"a dormantor inactivebody." Consequently,the
foundationpursuedan "orderlyliquidation" of the programby providing
taperinggrantsto themaininstitutions overa periodoffouryears.Those out-
lays werejustifiedas "conservation"grantsthatsoughtto hold togetherthe
assembledexperiencedpersonnel,in the hope thattheymightfindpostwar
employment undergovernmental auspices.33
The foundation'sfascinationwith China and the emphasis on socially
appliedresearchwere also evidentin the projectsfundedby the Humanities
Division in the 1930s. Despite some calls forthe additionof a humanistic
dimensionto thefoundation'sChinapolicy,priorto theappointment ofDavid
H. Stevensas directorof the HumanitiesDivision in 1932 it had provided
fundsmostlyforarcaneantiquarianstudiesand conservative workin graduate
schools. Withits new interestin social control,the foundationreplacedits
rarefiedviewofculturewitha determination to putculturalvaluesto practical
use. Soon the foundation's aspirations in that area turned decidedly
nonacademic, as the "controllingpurpose" became "to increase the
importanceof culturalvalues in contemporary life." The new consensus
32 Grantto Gunn,May 11, 1938,box 7, series601, RG 1.1, Rockefeller FoundationArchives;
SelskarM. Gunn,"Recommendations forChina Program,1939-1940,"March24, 1939,box 13,
ibid.
33 Gunnto Fosdick,Dec. 30, 1937,box 14,ibid.; Gunnto M. C. Balfour, Sept.9, 1940,ibid.;
ThomasB. Applegetto Gunn,March1, 1940,ibid.; transcript oftelephoneconversation between
GunnandFosdick,Jan.24, 1940,ibid.Another factorin thedecisionto terminate theprogram was
withYen's administrative
a growingdisillusionment talents.M. C. Balfourcomplainedthat"he
seems to be mostlywords,words,words!"Balfourto Gunn,Jan.1, 1940,box 12,ibid.; Grant,
memo,July24, 1937,box 14,ibid.;Gunnto Balfour, Dec. 12, 1939,ibid.
814 The Journalof American History
ibid.; I. A. Richards to Stevens, March 8, 1939, ibid.; mimeographed excerpts from Trustees
ConfidentialBulletin, April 1940, box 1, series 911, RG 3, ibid. At the same time that he sought to
introduce Western analytical concepts to the Chinese with a minimum of cross-cultural
confusion, I. A. Richards wanted classical Chinese humanist thought to remain accessible to
Western and Chinese scholars. I. A. Richards, Mencius on the Mind: Experiments in Multiple
Definition (London, 1932), xiii.
The Rockefeller
Foundationand China 817
45 For a similar conclusion with respect to education and politics, see Philip West, Yenching
Universityand Sino-Westem Relations, 1916-1952 (Cambridge, Mass., 1976), 247-48. For the
debate within China over the value of science and liberal rationalism, see D. W. Y. Kwok,
Scientism in Chinese Thought, 1900-1950 (New Haven, 1965), 3-160; JeromeB. Grieder,Hu Shih
and the Chinese Renaissance: Liberalism in the Chinese Revolution (Cambridge, Mass., 1970),
94-135; and Chow Tse-tsung, The May Fourth Movement: Intellectual Revolution in Modem
China (Cambridge,Mass., 1960), 333-37.
46 Nielsen, Big Foundations, 379-80; Robert H. Bremner, American Philanthropy (Chicago,
1960), 3; James A. Field, Jr.,America and the Mediterranean World, 1776-1882 (Princeton,
1969), x.
Foundationand China
The Rockefeller 819