'Edgar Snow' (b.
17 July 1905 in
Kansas City, Missouri, d.
15 February 1972 in
Geneva) was an
American journalist known for his books and articles on
Communism in
China and the Chinese Communist revolution. He is believed to be the first Western journalist to interview Chinese Communist leader
Mao Zedong, and is best known for ''
Red Star Over China'' (
1937) an account of the Chinese Communist movement from its foundation until the late 1930s.
Biography
He studied journalism at the
University of Missouri, where he joined the
Zeta Phi chapter of
Beta Theta Pi, but moved to
New York City before graduating. He made some money in the stock market and sold out before the crash of
1929. He moved to China in
1928 and stayed until
1941. While in China, he wrote and published numerous articles and books. He also worked for the Chinese government in
Beijing. In
1937 he published the work that was to make him famous, ''
Red Star Over China'', an account of the Communist revolutionary movement from its founding, through the
Long March, and up until the Communists settled temporarily in the
Yan'an base area in the mid-1930s. Snow conducted interviews for much of the book's contents in
Bao'an, then Mao's headquarters, introducing the world to the Communist Party of China leader
Mao Zedong. The
Communist Party of China he described in the book would, under Mao's leadership, go on to found the
People's Republic of China in October of 1949.
Snow returned to the United States in 1941 with his American wife, Helen Foster. In April of 1942 the
Saturday Evening Post sent him abroad as a war correspondent. Snow traveled to India, China and Russia to report on
World War II from the perspective of those countries. His 1944 book ''People On Our Side'' emphasized their role in the fight against
fascism. Because of his communist ties,
McCarthyism made life difficult for Snow, forcing him to leave America in the 1950s. He moved to
Switzerland, but retained his American citizenship.
He returned to China in
1960 and
1964 and interviewed
Mao Zedong and
Zhou Enlai. In
1969, he made a final trip to China and was told that President
Richard Nixon would be welcome to visit either officially or as a private citizen. The White House followed this visit with interest but distrusted Snow and his pro-communist reputation.
[1] When Snow came down with cancer, Zhou Enlai dispatched a team of Chinese doctors to Switzerland. Snow died on
February 15,
1972, the week President Nixon was traveling to China, and did not live to see the normalization of relations.
Works
★ ''
Red Star Over China''
★ ''Red China Today: The Other Side of the River''
★ ''The Battle for Asia''
★ ''Far Eastern Front''
★ ''People On Our Side'' (Random House, 1944)
★ ''China, Russia, and the USA''
★ ''The Long Revolution''
★ ''Living China: Modern Chinese Short Stories''
Reading
Edgar Snow, 'Journey to the Beginning' (New York: Random House, 1958). Memoir.
John Maxwell Hamilton, 'Edgar Snow: A Biography' (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1988). Review: Jonathan Mirsky, "Message from Mao," 'New York Review' (February 16 1985): 15-17.
S. Bernard Thomas, 'Season of High Adventure: Edgar Snow in China' (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996).
External link
★
Edgar Snow Archives at the University of Missouri in Kansas City