Guy Alitto


Guy Salvatore Alitto is an American academic in the History and East Asian Languages and Civilization Departments at the University of Chicago. He is known in China for revitalizing the scholarship on Chinese Confucian scholar Liang Shuming. He is also often quoted in popular Chinese media sources. He is best known in America for his scholarship and for his role as translator for the first official Chinese delegations to the United States after Richard Nixon's first visits to China.

Career

Alitto received his Ph.D. at Harvard in 1975 in Chinese history. His advisors were Benjamin I. Schwartz and John Fairbank.
Alitto did not immediately find a faculty position in the United States. Instead, he took a part-time role in Donghai University in Taiwan.
His first book, published by University of California Press in 1979, The Last Confucian: Liang Shu-ming and the Chinese Dilemma of Modernity won the John K. Fairbank Prize. In it, Alitto studies Liang as a forward looking Confucian who put his thought into action. Liang, along with James Yen and Tao Xingzhi, was a leader in the Rural Reconstruction Movement of the 1920s and 1930s. His Rural Reconstruction project in Zouping County, Shandong, drew national attention but was destroyed in the Japanese Invasion of 1937. Alitto was one of the first foreign academicians allowed into rural China and observed Zouping between 1987 and 1991. He continued visiting the area throughout the 80s and 90s, and it is reported in China Daily that the academic became a regular figure in the area.

Influence

Alitto is best known in China, where he was instrumental in revitalizing scholarship into Liang Shuming, one of the last major Confucian scholars. Alitto wrote his book The Last Confucian: Liang Shu-ming and the Chinese Dilemma of Modernity in 1979. Before this book, Shuming had been "consigned to the dustbin of history." Alitto was widely popularized in the China Central TV episode The Last Confucian and Me.
Alitto is often cited in Chinese national media sources. Examples include Alitto's support of Chinese jurisdiction in the Senkaku Islands dispute, his statement that the Falungong "represents more of a rupture than a continuity with Chinese religious traditions," or his interest in rural areas of China.

Select publications