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The Mouth That Begs

Hunger, Cannibalism, and the Politics of Eating in Modern China
  • Gang Yue
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 1999
View more publications by Duke University Press
Post-Contemporary Interventions
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About this book

The Chinese ideogram chi is far richer in connotation than the equivalent English verb “to eat.” Chi can also be read as “the mouth that begs for food and words.” A concept manifest in the twentieth-century Chinese political reality of revolution and massacre, chi suggests a narrative of desire that moves from lack to satiation and back again. In China such fundamental acts as eating or refusing to eat can carry enormous symbolic weight. This book examines the twentieth-century Chinese political experience as it is represented in literature through hunger, cooking, eating, and cannibalizing. At the core of Gang Yue’s argument lies the premise that the discourse surrounding the most universal of basic human acts—eating—is a culturally specific one.
Yue’s discussion begins with a brief look at ancient Chinese alimentary writing and then moves on to its main concern: the exploration and textual analysis of themes of eating in modern Chinese literature from the May Fourth period through the post-Tiananmen era. The broad historical scope of this volume illustrates how widely applicable eating-related metaphors can be. For instance, Yue shows how cannibalism symbolizes old China under European colonization in the writing of Lu Xun. In Mo Yan’s 1992 novel Liquorland, however, cannibalism becomes the symbol of overindulgent consumerism. Yue considers other writers as well, such as Shen Congwen, Wang Ruowang, Lu Wenfu, Zhang Zianliang, Ah Cheng, Zheng Yi, and Liu Zhenyun. A special section devoted to women writers includes a chapter on Xiao Hong, Wang Anyi, and Li Ang, and another on the Chinese-American women writers Jade Snow Wong, Maxine Hong Kingston, and Amy Tan. Throughout, the author compares and contrasts the work of these writers with similarly themed Western literature, weaving a personal and political semiotics of eating.
The Mouth That Begs will interest sinologists, literary critics, anthropologists, cultural studies scholars, and everyone curious about the semiotics of food.


Author / Editor information

Gang Yue is Assistant Professor of Chinese at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Reviews

“A very provocative view of the way modern Chinese practice, imagine, and politicize food culture and alimentary discourse. Instead of paying only lip service to materiality, Yue truly grapples with the material aspect of Chinese modernity.”—David Wang, author of Fictional Realism in Modern China: Mao Dun, Lao She, Shen Congwen

“Eating is certainly one of the great cultural metaphors in China, past and present. The Mouth That Begs is magnificent—sophisticated in writing and original in approach and interpretation. A most brilliant work indeed.”—Leo Ou-fan Lee, Harvard University


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Some Notes toward a Semiotic of Eating in Ancient China
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I The Social Embodiment of Modernity

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II Writing Hunger: From Mao to the Dao

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Zhang Xianliang and Ah Cheng
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III The Return (of) Cannibalism after Tiananmen, or Red Monument in a Latrine Pit

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Zheng Yi and Liu Zhenyun
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Mo Yan's Liquorland
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IV Sampling of Variety: Ciender and Cross-Cultural Perspectives

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Xiao Hong, Wang Anyi, and Li Ang
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Maxine Hong Kingston, Jade Snow Wong, and Amy Tan
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
July 2, 1999
eBook ISBN:
9780822398516
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
464
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