Lin Zhao 林昭 papers, 1934-1982

Collection context

Summary

Creators:
Lin, Zhao, 1932-1968
Abstract:
The Lin Zhao 林昭 papers (1934-1982) contains letters and diaries, written in prison; photographs; and posthumous rehabilitation documents and printed matter: relating to political prisoners in China.
Extent:
1 manuscript box (0.4 Linear Feet)
Language:
Chinese
Preferred citation:

[Identification of item], Lin Zhao 林昭 papers, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Library & Archives.

Background

Scope and content:

On October 26, 2009 the Hoover Institution Library and Archives opened a collection of the letters and diaries of Chinese political activist Lin Zhao (Lin Chao 林昭) for public use. Lin Zhao, the nom de guerre of Peng Linzhao (1932-1968), was arrested for her criticisms of the ruling Chinese Communist Party during the Anti-Rightist Campaign of 1958; she spent most of the following decade in prison until her execution in Shanghai in April 1968, at the height of the Cultural Revolution.

During the last years of her life, she compiled an extensive collection of prison writings--some of them written in her own blood--detailing her grievances with the government and her demands for political reform. Although most of these writings have long since disappeared, a small collection of original prison diaries and letters were returned to Lin Zhao's family after her posthumous rehabilitation by the Chinese government in 1981. Those documents form the basis of the new collection of Lin Zhao's papers at the Hoover Institution, the first such collection of her papers that has been made publicly available to students and scholars at an academic archive.

Initially an ardent supporter of the Communist Party, Lin Zhao took part in the agrarian reform movement following the Chinese Revolution of 1949. By the time she began her studies at Beijing University in the early 1950s, she had begun to question the Communist Party's treatment of its opponents and to wish for reform within the party to which she was still loyal. When the Hundred Flowers Campaign of 1956-1957 encouraged intellectuals to voice criticisms of the government, Lin Zhao and many of her acquaintances at the university took part. Soon, however, the government changed its course; as it began to crack down on those expressions of dissent, Lin Zhao was swept up in the subsequent Anti-Rightist Movement and eventually imprisoned as a result of her outspoken critiques. During her imprisonment she began the writings for which she is well known today, including the "blood letters," which she wrote in own blood. In the decades since her rehabilitation, Lin Zhao has gained attention not only in China but internationally, partly owing to a 2005 documentary film by the Chinese filmmaker Hu Jie, In Search of Lin Zhao's Soul, which chronicled her life and examined her legacy.

The Lin Zhao papers at the Hoover Institution consist of a series of diaries and open letters written between 1965 and 1968, only a small portion of her prison writings (the rest have disappeared). Those materials, which were returned to Lin Zhao's family in 1982, were donated to the Hoover Institution earlier this year by her sister, Lingfan Peng. In addition, Ms. Peng generously donated family photographs of Lin Zhao, as well as additional letters and documents, all of which will provide researchers with a firsthand look at this intriguing, controversial, and courageous personality whose life continues to generate interest among students of recent Chinese history.

Biographical / historical:
Date Event
1932 December 12
Born, as Peng Lingzhao, in Suzhou, Jiangsu Province, China.
1943-1949
Attended Cuiying Private Secondary School and Jinghai Women's Teachers College in Suzhou
1950 August - 1952 May
Participated in the Sunan rural land reform movement
1954
Admitted to Peking University's (PKU) School of Journalism where she was editor of the Poetry Society's PKU Poetry Journal
1957
Condemned to three years of labor reeducation camp
1960 Spring
Allowed to return to Shanghai for medical treatment; founded Xinghuo magazine
1960 October
Accused of founding a counter-revolutionary group; arrested and detained at Shanghai Number One Detention House, Shanghai Number Two Detention House and Shanghai Municipal Jail
1962 Spring
Released on bail for medical rehabilitation
1962 December
Incarcerated a second time in Shanghai, China. Staged multiple hunger strikes and attempted suicide while in prison
1965 May 31
Condemned to 20 years of imprisonment
1968 April 29
Executed, Shanghai Airport, China
Acquisition information:
Acquired by the Hoover Institution Library Archives in 2009.
Arrangement:

The papers are arranged by type of material, as they were received from the donor.

Physical location:
Hoover Institution Library & Archives
Rules or conventions:
Describing Archives: A Content Standard

Access and use

Restrictions:

Users must sign use agreement. Originals closed; there is digitized content from this collection available.

Terms of access:

One folder at a time. No photography. Use agreement required. For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Library & Archives.

Preferred citation:

[Identification of item], Lin Zhao 林昭 papers, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Library & Archives.

Location of this collection:
Hoover Institution Library & Archives, Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-6003, US
Contact:
(650) 723-3563