Zhou Youguang


Zhou Youguang, also known as Chou Yu-kuang or Chou Yao-ping, was a Chinese economist, linguist, sinologist, and supercentenarian. He has been credited as the father of pinyin, the most popular romanization system for Chinese, which was adopted by the People's Republic of China in 1958, the International Organization for Standardization in 1982, and the United Nations in 1986.

Early life and career

Zhou Yaoping was born in Changzhou, Jiangsu, on 13 January 1906 to a Qing government official. At the age of ten, he and his family moved to Suzhou. In 1918, he entered Changzhou Senior High School, during which time he first took an interest in linguistics. He graduated in 1923 with honors.
Zhou enrolled that same year in St. John's University, Shanghai where he majored in economics and took supplementary coursework in linguistics. He was almost unable to attend due to his family's poverty, but friends and relatives raised 200 yuan for the admission fee, and also helped him pay for tuition. He left in 1925 during the May Thirtieth Movement and transferred to Guanghua University, from which he graduated in 1927.
On 30 April 1933, Zhou married Zhang Yunhe. The couple moved to Japan for Zhou's studies, with Zhou enrolling as an exchange student at the University of Tokyo. He later transferred to Kyoto University due to his admiration of Hajime Kawakami, a Marxist economist who was a professor there at the time. Kawakami's arrest for joining the outlawed Japanese Communist Party in January 1933 meant that Zhou could not be his student. Zhou's son,, was born in 1934. The couple also had a daughter named Xiaohe.
In 1937, due to the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War, Zhou and his family moved to the wartime capital of Chongqing, where his daughter died. He worked for Sin Hua Bank before entering public service as a deputy director at the Ministry of Economic Affairs's agricultural policy bureau. Following the Japanese surrender in 1945, Zhou went back to work for Sin Hua; from there, he was stationed overseas: first in New York City, and then in London. While in New York, he met Albert Einstein twice while visiting friends at Princeton University.
For a time, Zhou participated in the China Democratic National Construction Association. He returned to Shanghai following the proclamation of the People's Republic of China in 1949, where he taught economics for several years at Fudan University.

Design of pinyin

In 1955, Chinese premier Zhou Enlai, who had a preexisting friendship with Zhou, summoned him to Beijing and tasked his team with developing an alphabet for China. Although he had only worked as an economist up to this point, Zhou Enlai had recalled his fascination with linguistics and Esperanto. The Chinese government placed Zhou at the head of a committee tasked with reforming the Chinese writing system, with the goal being to increase literacy among the population.
While other committees worked to promulgate Standard Chinese as the national language, and simplify the forms of Chinese characters, Zhou's committee was charged with the development of an alphabet intended to eventually replace characters altogether. Zhou later recalled that the assignment was a full-time job, and ultimately required around three years of work. Zhou's team based aspects of pinyin on preexisting systems: its phonemes were inspired by Gwoyeu Romatzyh and Latinxua Sin Wenz, while its system of diacritics for representing tones was inspired by bopomofo. In 1958, the Chinese government adopted pinyin as its official romanization system, though by this point its intended purpose was to accompany Chinese characters, rather than replace them.
In April 1979, on behalf of the Chinese government Zhou attended an International Organization for Standardization conference in Warsaw, where he proposed that pinyin be adopted as an international standard. Following a vote in 1982, the scheme became ISO 7098. Since its initial promulgation, pinyin has largely replaced older systems like Gwoyeu Romatzyh and Wade–Giles.

Later activities

As happened with many other intellectuals, Zhou was sent down to the countryside during the Cultural Revolution, where he spent two years in a labor camp.
After 1980, Zhou worked with Liu Zunqi and Chien Wei-zang to translate the Encyclopædia Britannica into Chinese, which earned him the nickname "Encyclopedia Zhou". Zhou continued writing and publishing after the creation of pinyin; for example, his book The Historical Evolution of Chinese Languages and Scripts, translated into English by Zhang Liqing, was published in 2003. Beyond the age of 100, he published ten books, some of which have been banned in China.
During a 2011 interview with NPR, Zhou said that he hoped to see the day China changed its position on the Tiananmen Square killings in 1989, an event he said had ruined Deng Xiaoping's reputation as a reformer. He became an advocate of political reform and democracy in China, and was critical of the Chinese Communist Party's attacks on traditional Chinese culture when it came to power in 1949.
In early 2013, Zhou and his son were interviewed by Adeline Yen Mah at their home in Beijing. Mah documented the visit on video, during which she presented Zhou with a pinyin game for the iPad that she had created. Zhou became a supercentenarian on 13 January 2016 when he reached the age of 110.
Zhou died on 14 January 2017 at his home in Beijing, one day after his 111th birthday. The cause of death was not made public. His wife had died in 2002, and his son had died in 2015. The following year, a Google Doodle featuring an animated logo in Chinese honored what would have been Zhou's 112th birthday.

Books

Zhou was the author of more than 40 books, some of them banned in China and over 10 of them published after he turned 100 in 2006.
TitlePinyinEnglish titlePublication year
新中国的金融问题Xīn zhōngguó de jīnróng wèntíNew China's financial problems1949
汉语拼音词汇Hànyǔ pīnyīn cíhuìChinese phonetic alphabet glossary1950
中国拼音文字研究Zhōngguó pīnyīn wénzì yánjiūA study of Chinese phonetic alphabets1953
资本的原始积累Zīběn de yuánshǐ jīlěiPrimitive accumulation of capital1954
字母的故事Zìmǔ de gùshiThe alphabet's story1954
汉字改革概论Hànzì gǎigé gài lùnOn the reform of Chinese characters1961
电报拼音化Diànbào pīnyīn huàTelegraph romanization1965
汉语手指字母论集Hànyǔ shǒuzhǐ zìmǔ lùn jíEssays on Chinese Sign Language1965
汉字声旁读音便查Hànzì Shēngpáng dúyīn BiàncháA handy guide to the pronunciation of phonetics in Chinese characters1980
拼音化问题Pīnyīn huà wèntíProblems with Pinyin1980
语文风云Yǔwén fēngyúnThe tempest of language1981
中国语文的现代化Zhōngguó yǔwén de xiàndàihuàModernization of the Chinese language1986
世界字母简史Shìjiè zìmǔ jiǎn shǐA brief history of the world's alphabets1990
新语文的建设Xīn yǔwén de jiànshèConstructing new languages1992
中国语文纵横谈Zhōngguó yǔwén zònghéng tánFeatures of the Chinese language1992
汉语拼音方案基础知识Hànyǔ Pīnyīn Fāng'àn jīchǔ zhīshìFundamentals of Pinyin1993
语文闲谈Yǔwén xiántánLanguage Chat1995
文化畅想曲Wénhuà chàngxiǎng qǔCapriccio on culture or Cultural fantasia1997
世界文字发展史Shìjiè wénzì fāzhǎn shǐHistory of the worldwide development of writing1997
中国语文的时代演进Zhōngguó yǔwén de shídài yǎnjìnThe historical evolution of Chinese languages and scripts1997
比较文字学初探Bǐjiào wénzì xué chūtànA tentative study of comparative philology1998
多情人不老Duō qíngrén bùlǎoPassionate people don't age1998
汉字和文化问题Hànzì hé wénhuà wèntíChinese characters and the question of culture1999
新时代的新语文Xīn shídài de xīn yǔwénThe new language of the new era1999
人类文字浅说Rénlèi wénzì qiǎnshuōAn introduction to human language2000
现代文化的冲击波Xiàndài wénhuà de chōngjíbōThe shock wave of modern culture2000
21世纪的华语和华文21 Shìjì de huáyǔ hé huáwénWritten and spoken Chinese of 21st century2002
周有光语文论集Zhōu Yǒuguāng yǔwén lùn jíCollection of essays by Zhou Youguang on the Chinese language2002
百岁新稿Bǎi suì xīn gǎoCentenarian's essay2005
朝闻道集Zhāo wén dào jíEssay collection2010
拾贝集Shi bèi jíSelected essays2011
今日花开又一年Jīnrì huā kāi yòu yī niánToday a new year blooms2011
我的人生故事Wǒ de rénshēng gùshiMy life story2013
逝年如水 - 周有光百年口述Shì nián rúshuǐ - Zhōu Yǒuguāng bǎinián kǒushù"The years passed like water" - Zhou Youguang's oral recounting of his life2015