Zhou Yang (politician)
| Zhou Yang | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Chinese | 周揚 | ||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 周扬 | ||||||||
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Zhou Yang or Chou Yang (November 7, 1908 – July 31, 1989), courtesy name Qiying (起应), was a Chinese literary theorist, translator and Marxist thinker, and Communist Party official, active from the founding of the League of the Left-Wing Writers in 1930. In the 1930s he was notable for his sharp disagreements with other leftist writers, including Lu Xun, concerning leftist literary theory. Zhou also translated the works of Leo Tolstoy and other Russian writers into Chinese.
Zhou Yang had a long career as a leading member of the Chinese Communist Party and a high-level government official in the People's Republic of China, being the Deputy Head of the Party's Propaganda Department as well as Deputy Minister of Culture in the years leading up to the Cultural Revolution, and then as a member of the Party's Central Committee following the end of that period. During the Cultural Revolution itself Zhou Yang was denounced and stripped of his posts: the campaign against him was kicked off by attacks on his 1930s era concept of "literature for national defense", which was judged to be revisionist.