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El Dewey Chino: Amigo, demonio y buque insignia

Author

Summary, in English

This article analyzes how the American philosopher and educator John Dewey was received, adapted, and transformed in four different time periods in China: during the Republican era (1912–1949), after the Communist take-over in 1949, after Deng Xiaoping's launch of the 'Four Modernizations' (in the 1980s), and in present-day

China. Dewey is generally seen to have exerted an immense influence on Chinese education. The article scrutinizes how this influence unfolded both through Dewey himself and through his mediators, propagators, and critics between the time of his visit in 1919 and today. Particular attention is paid to how certain of his ideas were

taken up – and others were ignored or twisted – to fit the intellectuals' agenda of each time period. By tracing the changes that central concepts like 'pragmatism' or 'child-centered pedagogy' underwent over the course of nine decades, the article reveals how Dewey was successfully transformed into the Chinese 'Duwei' – into a friend of the Chinese people, a fiend of China and Marxism, and a flagship of modernization.

Department/s

Publishing year

2009

Language

Spanish

Pages

67-101

Publication/Series

Encounters on Education

Issue

10

Document type

Journal article

Topic

  • Other Social Sciences

Keywords

  • John Dewey
  • educational transfer
  • reception processes
  • Chinese educational history

Status

Published