LC control no. | n 82068137 |
---|---|
Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Hinton, William |
Variant(s) | Han, Ding 韓丁 Weilian Xindun 威廉·辛頓 |
Birth date | 1919-02-02 |
Death date | 2004-05-05 |
Place of birth | Chicago (Ill.) |
Profession or occupation | Authors Intellectuals |
Special note | Non-Latin script references not evaluated. |
Found in | His Shenfan, c1982: CIP t.p. (William Hinton) Fanshen, 1997: CIP t.p. (William Hinton) data sheet (b. 1919) Through a glass darkly, c2006: t.p. (William Hinton) p. 3 (William H. Hinton, 1919-2004) Wei ji bai ke WWW site, Jan. 26, 2010 (韓丁 = Han Ding; William Hinton; 威廉·辛頓 = Weilian Xindun; Feb. 2, 1919-May 5, 2004; authored Fan shen) Wikipedia, October 27, 2022: (William H. Hinton was an American Maoist intellectual, best known for his work on Communism in China; born in Chicago; was a staff member of the U.S. Office of War Information in China in the 1945, then an English teacher at the Northern University in Southeast Shanxi province, then worked as a tractor-technician for the United Nations, then joined the university-staffed land reform work team in the village of Long Bow under the Communist Party. He returned to the U.S. in 1953, at the height of McCarthyism, and he was blacklisted and denied employment; was able to recover all of his papers and notes seized in 1953 and wrote his first book, Fanshen, about his experience in Long Bow. He was sympathetic to the People's Republic of China until the market reforms of Deng Xiaoping, and he was an outspoken opponent of the socialist market economy) <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William%5FH.%5FHinton> |