释义 |
reˌorganiˈzationist [f. reorganization + -ist.] One who favours (political) reorganization; spec. a member of a radical Chinese faction (fl. 1930: see quot. 1975). Also attrib. or as adj.
1930Times 25 Mar. 23/5 Nanking was faced by a revolt from the so-called ‘Reorganisationists’, a group mainly consisting of the political leaders of the left who had been excluded from office. 1967J. Israel in A. Feuerwerker et al. Approaches to Mod. Chinese Hist. 292 Many Wuhan figures who cast their lot with Wang Ching-wei (exiled leader of the Reorganizationist faction) argued that the revolution remained ‘unfinished’. 1975I. C. Y. Hsü Rise Mod. China (ed. 2) xxiii. 653 Wang and his left-wing followers were out of office. The latter group retaliated by accusing Chiang of betraying the principles and ideas of Sun, and demanded a reorganization of the KMT in the spirit of the 1924 manifesto—hence their nickname ‘The Reorganizationists’. |