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CONTESTED MODERNITIES IN CHINESE LITERATURE
Edited by Charles A. Laughlin
Availability: Now In Stock
From Palgrave Macmillan
Pub date: Jun 2005
256 pages
Size 6-1/8 x 9-1/4
$85.00 - Hardcover (1-4039-6782-2)

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Description
Contested Modernities brings together the work of twelve scholars of modern Chinese culture which, from a multiplicity of perspectives, interrogates the myth of modern Chinese culture as a belated or diluted form of the Western experience of modernity. Articles on fiction, drama, film and literary historiography throughout the twentieth century are organized into sections on Rewriting Literary History, The Quotidian Apocalypse and The Moral Subject under Global Capitalism. From the intersecting angles of historical retrospect, shifting historical consciousness, and moral imagination, all show how Chinese cultural producers continue to carve out their own modernisms, neither essentially Chinese nor simply Western.

Author Bio
Charles A. Laughlin is Associate Professor of East Asian Languages and Literature, Yale University.

Praise for Contested Modernities in Chinese Literature
"This book examines the cultural and historical dynamics of modern China as manifested in literary and visual texts. By visualizing a network of histories continuously cutting across one another, the book provides a powerful critique of conventional paradigms of modern Chinese literature. It spans from the late nineteenth century to the turn of the new millennium, and it covers a very wide range of issues, from cultural production to gender politics, from national identity to the aesthetics of imagined community and citizenship, from urban ethics to diasporic crisis, and from spatial 'demolition' to visionary 'apocalypse'. The contributors have done most impressive work in making a comprehensive volume on the multifaceted dimensions of Chinese (post)modernity."
--David Der-wei Wang, Harvard University

"Engaged responsively with yet going far beyond the critical and thematic conventions handed down by the May Fourth tradition, the contributors to this volume raise fundamental questions of conceptualization, definition, archival research, and interpretation that will likely help transform and reshape the field of knowledge known hitherto as 'modern Chinese literature.' Editor Charles Laughlin is to be congratulated on his vision and leadership in this excellent collective endeavor." -- Rey Chow, author of Woman and Chinese Modernity and editor of Modern Chinese Literary and Cultural Studies in the Age of Theory

"Contested Modernities is a wonderfully diverse collection of essays-ranging in topic from the literature of the Republican era, to post-Mao fiction, theater, and film, to theater and film in Taiwan, to diaspora literature-that will further expand the ever-shifting boundaries of Chinese literary modernity. Some of the essays explicitly question conventional definitions of modern Chinese literature by diagnosing how and why those definitions came to be. Others, by drawing attention to new kinds of content, themes, and characters in recent literature, demonstrate that literary modernity in China is in a constant process of transformation and renewal."
--Kirk Denton, The Ohio State University

"Constituting what might be called the 'fourth generation' of American intellectuals engaging with 20th-century Chinese literature, these scholars have definitively moved beyond the old canon of modern Chinese writing that informed and determined the work of many of their predecessors. Ranging from introductions of previously marginalized voices to critical re-evaluations of the old mainstream, and demonstrating a keen interest in contemporary developments both inside and beyond the boundaries of China, these essays convincingly demonstrate the contested nature of Chinese modernity, as set out in Charles Laughlin's masterful introduction. This book shows, more than any collection I know, the vitality of modern Chinese literature as a field of study and its relevance to investigations and theories of global culture." --Michel Hockx, SOAS, University of London

Table of contents
Introduction--Charles Laughlin * Part 1 Rewriting Literary History * The Rhetorics of Modernity and the Logics of the Fetish--Alexander Des Forges * Woman and Her Affinity to Literature: Defining Women Writers' Role in China's Cultural Modernity--Megan Ferry * Desire and Disease: Bai Wei and the Thirties Literary Left--Amy D. Dooling * What's Chinese in Chinese Diasporic Literature?--Emme Teng * Toward a Theory of Postmodern/Post-Mao-Deng Literature - Xiaobin Yang * Part 2 - The Quotidian Apocalypse * Modernity and Apocalypse in Chinese Novels from the End of the Twentieth Century--Jeffrey C. Kinkley * Boundary-Crossing in The Great Going Abroad--Claire Conceison * Li Guoxiu's Ambiguous Answer to the Taiwan Question--John Weinstein * Tales of a Porous City: Public Residences and Private Streets in Taipei Films--Yomi Braester * Part 3- The Moral Subject Under Global Capitalism * Reproducing the Self: Consumption, Imaginary, and Identity in Chinese Women's Autobiographical Practice in the 1990s--Lingzhen Wang * Urban Ethics: Modernity and the Morality of Everyday Life--Robin Visser * Capitalist and Enlightenment Values in 1990s Chinese Fiction: The Case of Yu Hua's Blood Merchant--Deirdre Sabina Knight

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