On March 20, 1903, Zhong Jingwen was born Tan Zong () in
Haifeng County, Guangdong. In November 1927, Zhong co-founded a weekly folklore journal titled
Folk Literature and Arts () alongside
Dong Zuobin,
Yang Chengzhi, and
He Sijing. Zhong was the chief editor and a major contributor to the journal. Dong returned to Nanyang in December to care for his sick mother, leaving Zhong as the sole editor. After twelve issues, the journal's sponsors discontinued it in 1928, seeing it as overly focused on literature and art at the expense of broader folklore studies. Later in November 1927, Zhong joined with other literature and history faculty (including Gu Jiegang, Dong Zuobin, and ) of SYSU to found the Folklore Society of SYSU, the first such folkloristics society in China. Inspired by the SYSU Society, folklore societies were founded at at least ten other Chinese universities. In 1928, the society published Zhong's
monograph Collected Lectures on Folk Arts, a systemic analysis of a number of folk songs and stories collected among ethnic minority groups in China. A portion is dedicated to the
Zhuang people of
Guangxi, with a focus on the mythical singer
Liu Sanjie; he describes the Zhuang as "savages" with "extremely naïve behaviors", attributing their fantastical folk songs to their irrationality, immaturity, and lack of civilization. In March 1928, the Folklore Society began publication of a successor to
Folk Literature and Arts titled
Folklore Weekly (). Zhong served as chief editor, supervised by Gu and Rong. The journal became the primary publication of the Society and the most voluminous periodical of the growing Folklore Movement, with 123 issues produced over its 1928–1933 publication run. Zhong's tenure as editor was short-lived; university president
Dai Jitao fired Zhong in the summer of 1928 for publishing the
Second Collection of Wu Songs, containing songs that Dai saw as glorifying superstition. At the invitation of , he became a professor at the College of Arts and Sciences of
Zhejiang University in
Hangzhou. During the 1920s, Zhong partnered with
Zhao Jingshen to perform comparative studies of western and Chinese
children's literature. In 1934, Zhong left his position at Zhejiang to serve as a visiting professor at
Waseda University in
Tokyo, Japan. While at Waseda, he worked alongside various Japanese sinologists and mythologist . He returned to teaching in Hangzhou in 1936. == Postwar career ==