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Chen Ziying and Woods Hole: Bringing the Marine Biological Laboratory to Amoy, China, 1930–1936

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Abstract

This article examines Chen Ziying, an American-trained Chinese biologist and his prewar efforts to bring his Woods Hole experience from the United States to China between 1930 and 1936. I argue that the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) appears as a prominent American scientific institution in the twentieth century among visiting Chinese students and scholars who were drawn to the American approach of building world-class seaside laboratories to facilitate marine biological study while cultivating a collaborative culture via songs of biology. Chen was one of the leading US-trained Chinese scientists who aspired to the international trend of developing coastal biology in the early twentieth century and was determined to modernize China’s discipline-building of biology with the construction of marine research facilities similar to the MBL. I show that Chen’s efforts of bringing the MBL practice to China took place at a time when science in China was overshadowed by the impulse of nationalism. Despite the nationalistic rhetoric, Chen was able to establish a Chinese connection with Woods Hole by introducing the MBL cultural practices of songs with biological significance. Lyrics from popular biological songs such as “It’s a Long Way from Amphioxus” and “Songs of Amoy” reflect not just Darwinian themes but also a transnational connection between American and Chinese biologists in Republican-era China––a period in modern Chinese history that is often characterized by soaring sentiments of nationalism. This paper sets out to reconsider the interplay of scientific nationalism and scientific internationalism in shaping marine science in modern China, as well as to reflect on the meanings of value-laden terms such as “nationalism” and “foreignness” and their conceptual impacts on writing the historiography of biology in twentieth-century China.

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Notes

  1. Box 16, FA #426, RG#10.2, “13. China Medical Board (CMB) Medical Fellowships, Premedical & Misc.,” Rockefeller Archive Center, Sleepy Hollow, New York; heareafter: RAC.

  2. Physiology was one of the four main courses offered at the MBL since 1892. Together with botany, zoology, and embryology, these four courses were offered until the 1960s, after which the MBL began to expand the curriculum and increase the number of summer courses. For the history of the educational program at the MBL (MacCord and Maienschein 2018).

  3. For an excellent analysis of the biological research of Chinese native flora and fauna as embodiment of China’s past and nationhood, see Jiang (2016a).

  4. It should be noted that not all European stations surveyed in Kofoid’s report were built to accommodate instruction with investigation equally. As an anonymous reviewer suggested, Stazione Zoologica di Napoli in Naples, Stazione Zoologica de Roscoff in France, and the Plymouth Station in England, founded in the 1880s and 1890s, had limited places for students and only offered a few courses.

  5. Diana Kenney, “University of Chicago and Marine Biological Laboratory Agree to Form Affiliation,” June 12, 2013, https://www.mbl.edu/uc-affiliation/.

  6. See letter from William S. Carter to Edwin G. Conklin, 11 November 1925, Box 3, Folder 12, Edwin Conklin Papers (C0322), Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library, Princeton, NJ.

  7. I thank one of the reviewers for bringing this point to the forefront.

  8. Box 38, Folder 312, Series #601, RG#1, CMB Collection, RAC.

  9. The place-name “Woods Hole” was transliterated by Chen into Chinese as “胡史屋” (hu shi wu). David Wright (1998) has discussed the problem with translating foreign place-names to Chinese before the standardization of Chinese in the 1950s. The same place-name of foreign countries could have multiple translated names by different translators. For example, “Persia” was rendered as baixi, baoshe, bashe, baiershe, bierxi, and even gaoshe. In the present case, the current Chinese translation of “Woods Hole” is “伍茲霍爾” (wu zi huo er), but it has appeared in Chinese print materials as other names. In addition to Chen’s suggested translation, Bing Zhi, another eminent Chinese biologist in Republican-era China, translated “Woods Hole” as “烏子吼耳” (wu zi hou er). See Bing (1923).

  10. For a general history of the translation of modern Western science in modern China, and particularly the country’s ambivalent attitudes towards adopting Japanese scientific loanwords, see Wright (1998).

  11. Fa-Ti Fan has contrasted the biological surveys vis-à-vis geological surveys in Republican-era China. Unlike the geological surveys, which were centrally coordinated and administered by the government, biological surveys in early twentieth-century China did not receive such focused attention from the government. In this respect, biological surveys in Republican China were similar to social surveys, as they were quite contingent upon the availability of local resources and opportunities. See Fan and Mathew (2016).

  12. A recently published co-edited volume, Why Study Biology by the Sea?, collects scholarly attempts to address this perennial question; see Matlin, Maienschein, and Ankeny (2020).

  13. Official state song, “Illinois.” https://www2.illinois.gov/Pages/about/StateSong.aspx.

  14. Cora D. Reeves, Amoy, July 1930. Box 38, Folder 312, Series #601, RG#1, CMB Collection, RAC. I bolded the stanza that corresponds to the English portion of the aforementioned bilingual verse.

  15. For an overview of the influence of escalating nationalism on modern Chinese intellectual history, see Schwartz (1983); for a critique of the May Fourth paradigm, see Chow et al. (2008).

  16. Areas under investigation include seventeen counties in the Fujian province: Fu Ding, Xia Pu, Fu An, Ning De, Lian Jiang, Min Hou, Chang Le, Fu Qing, Ping Tan, Xing Hua, Hui An, Jin Jiang, Jin Men, Tong An, Si Ming, Hai Cheng, and Dong Shan; see Chen (1935).

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Funding was provided by Marine Biological Laboratory (Grant No. Travel grant).

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Correspondence to Christine Y. L. Luk.

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Luk, C.Y.L. Chen Ziying and Woods Hole: Bringing the Marine Biological Laboratory to Amoy, China, 1930–1936. J Hist Biol 54, 151–173 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10739-021-09636-7

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