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・ Wang Huan
・ Wang Huan (figure skater)
・ Wang Huansheng
・ Wang Huayong
・ Wang Huei-chen
・ Wang Huei-mei
・ Wang Hui
・ Wang Hui (intellectual)
・ Wang Hui (judoka)
・ Wang Hui (Qing dynasty)
・ Wang Hui (Tang dynasty)
・ Wang Hui-ling
・ Wang Huifeng
・ Wang Huimin
・ Wang Huiqin
Wang Huiwu
・ Wang Huiyao
・ Wang Huiyuan
・ Wang Huizhong
・ Wang Hung-hsiang
・ Wang Hung-Pin
・ Wang Huning
・ Wang Huo
・ Wang Institute of Graduate Studies
・ Wang International Standard Code for Information Interchange
・ Wang Ithok
・ Wang Jha-ji
・ Wang Ji
・ Wang Ji (Three Kingdoms)
・ Wang Ji'en


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Wang Huiwu : ウィキペディア英語版
Wang Huiwu

Wang Huiwu (; May 189820 October 1993) was a social reformer, a Communist Party of China (CCP) women's organizer (in the early years), as well as a proponent of women's emancipation. She ran the first Communist-sponsored journal which was written and edited mostly by women. Her husband was Li Da (1890–1966) one of the founders of CCP and a propagator of Marxist Philosophy.
==Early life==
Wang was born in Jiaxing County, Zhejiang, Qing China,〔 to a school teacher and his illiterate wife. Her father, Wang Yanchen (who owned the local school), provided her initial education. Her father's untimely death put the family in a penurious situation. However, she continued with her studies at the Jiaxing Women's Normal School and the Hujun Academy for Girls, managed by Christian Missionaries, where she learned English and became a Christian.〔 At Hujun, she participated in student protests against the Paris Peace Conference. It was at Hujun while she became fluent in English that she imbibed the iconoclasm of the May Fourth Movement, which inspired her to spearhead the movement for women's emancipation.〔
After graduation, she moved to Shanghai where her cousin, Shen Yanbing, later known as Mao Dun (in later years one of the well known writers of China), introduced Wang to Marxists. She married Li Da, a Marxist philosopher and feminist, who had returned from Japan after studies, in autumn of 1920; they shared an apartment with Chen Duxiu and his wife, Gao Junman. Wang and Li moved to Changsha where they had a son (born 1924) and daughter (born 1925). After 1927, they lived in Shanghai and in Beijing, and in July 1937 during the Japanese invasion of northern China, they escaped and lived in Guilin and Guiyang, before eventually arriving in Chongqing, the war time capital.〔 They later divorced.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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