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Isabel Crook

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Isabel Crook
Crook in 1940
Crook in 1940
Born(1915-12-15)15 December 1915
Chengdu, Sichuan, China
Died20 August 2023(2023-08-20) (aged 107)
Beijing, China
OccupationProfessor, anthropologist
Language
  • English
  • Chinese
Nationality
  • Canadian
  • British
Alma mater
Notable works
  • Xinglong Chang: Field Notes of a Village Called Prosperity 1940–1942
  • Revolution in a Chinese Village: Ten Mile Inn
Notable awardsMedal of Friendship (2019)
Spouse
(m. 1942; died 2000)
Children3
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinRáo Sùméi

Isabel Crook (Chinese: 饶素梅; pinyin: Ráo Sùméi; 15 December 1915 – 20 August 2023) was a Canadian-British anthropologist, political prisoner, and professor at Beijing Foreign Studies University. Crook was interested in anthropology at a young age, and after graduating in 1939, played a role in foreign language education in China. Crook also taught at a foreign affairs school, which became the predecessor of present-day Beijing Foreign Studies University.

Early life

Isabel Brown was born on 15 December 1915, in Chengdu, Sichuan, to Canadian missionaries Homer and Muriel Brown.[1][2] Homer was the dean of the Education Faculty at West China Union University.[2] Muriel set up Montessori Schools in China and served on the board of the YWCA.[3] Isabel's sisters, Muriel and Julia, were also born in Chengdu and all three attended the city's Canadian School.[2]

As a child, Isabel Brown became interested in anthropology and the many ethnic minorities in China.[4] In 1939, at the age of 23, she graduated from Victoria College at the University of Toronto.[2] She returned to China and set out for western Sichuan with a Chinese colleague to study the Yi people (known then as Lolos) who followed a shamanic religion and lived in a caste-based society heavily reliant on slavery.[2][4]

Later life, revolution and career

In the early 1940s, Isabel met David Crook, a British Stalinist who had spied for the NKVD in both Spain and Shanghai, and married him in 1942.[1] In 1947, they went to Ten Mile Inn, Shidong Township, Hebei Province, to observe and study the Chinese Land Reform.[5] Six months later, they accepted an invitation from CPC leaders to teach at a new foreign affairs school, the forerunner of today's Beijing Foreign Studies University (BFSU).[1]

As a teacher at BFSU, Crook laid the foundation for foreign language education in China.[6] During the Cultural Revolution, David was imprisoned from 1967 to 1973 in Qincheng prison, while she was confined to the BFSU campus.[7] Isabel said she understood and forgave her captors.[1] She retired from teaching in 1981 and resumed her research studies as an anthropologist. Her study of a village in Sichuan, which she, Xiji Yu [zh] and others had begun in the 1940s, was then published as Prosperity's Predicament: Identity, Reform, and Resistance in Rural Wartime China in 2013.[8][9]

In June 2019, she became an honorary citizen of Bishan District, Chongqing.[10]

The Crooks had three sons.[11][2] She died in Beijing on 20 August 2023, at the age of 107.[2]

Works

  • Xinglong Chang: Field Notes of a Village Called Prosperity 1940–1942 (兴隆场:抗战时期四川农民生活调查(1940–1942)) ISBN 9787101080346
  • Revolution in a Chinese Village: Ten Mile Inn (十里店:中国一个村庄的革命) ISBN 9781134685554
  • Gilmartin, Christina K; Crook, Isabel; Yu, Xiji (2013). Prosperity's Predicament: Identity, Reform and Resistance in Wartime China. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN-13 978-1-4422-5277-6

Awards

Crook was awarded a Doctor of Letters by Victoria University, Toronto in 2018.[12]

On 30 September 2019, Crook was awarded the Medal of Friendship by Chinese president Xi Jinping.[13]

References

Sources