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Chronology of Major Historical Events
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface and Acknowledgments ix
- Chronology of Major Historical Events xi
-
Part I. Thematic Essays
- 1. Historical Overview 3
- 2. Modern Chinese Literature as an Institution: Canon and Literary History 27
- 3. Language and Literary Form 38
- 4. Literary Communities and the Production of Literature 46
- 5. Between Tradition and Modernity: Contested Classical Poetry 55
- 6. Diaspora in Modern Chinese Literature 62
- 7. Sinophone Literature 72
- 8. Chinese Literature and Film Adaptation 80
-
Part II. Authors, Works, Schools
- 9. The Late Qing Poetry Revolution: Liang Qichao, Huang Zunxian, and Chinese Literary Modernity 89
- 10. The Uses of Fiction: Liang Qichao and His Contemporaries 97
- 11. Late Qing Fiction 104
- 12. Zhou Shoujuan’s Love Stories and Mandarin Ducks and Butterflies Fiction 111
- 13. Form and Reform: New Poetry and the Crescent Moon Society 121
- 14. Reconsidering the Origins of Modern Chinese Women’s Writing 128
- 15. The Madman That Was Ah Q: Tradition and Modernity in Lu Xun’s Fiction 136
- 16. Romantic Sentiment and the Problem of the Subject: Yu Dafu 145
- 17. Feminism and Revolution: The Work and Life of Ding Ling 152
- 18. The Debate on Revolutionary Literature 159
- 19. Mao Dun, the Modern Novel, and the Representation of Women 163
- 20. Ba Jin’s Family: Fiction, Representation, and Relevance 169
- 21. Chinese Modernism: The New Sensationists 176
- 22. Shen Congwen and Imagined Native Communities 183
- 23. Xiao Hong’s Field of Life and Death 189
- 24. Performing the Nation: Chinese Drama and Theater 195
- 25. Cao Yu and Thunderstorm 205
- 26. The Reluctant Nihilism of Lao She’s Rickshaw 211
- 27. Eileen Chang and Narratives of Cities and Worlds 217
- 28. Literature and Politics: Mao Zedong’s “Yan’an Talks” and Party Rectification 224
- 29. Qian Zhongshu and Yang Jiang: A Literary Marriage 231
- 30. Revolutionary Realism and Revolutionary Romanticism: Song of Youth 237
- 31. The Hundred Flowers: Qin Zhaoyang, Wang Meng, and Liu Binyan 245
- 32. Cold War Fiction from Taiwan and the Modernists 250
- 33. Nativism and Localism in Taiwanese Literature 258
- 34. The Cultural Revolution Model Theater 267
- 35. Martial Arts Fiction and Jin Yong 274
- 36. Taiwan Romance: Qiong Yao and San Mao 280
- 37. Misty Poetry 286
- 38. Scar Literature and the Memory of Trauma 293
- 39. Culture Against Politics: Roots-Seeking Literature 299
- 40. Mo Yan 307
- 41. Avant-Garde Fiction in Post-Mao China 313
- 42. Contemporary Experimental Theaters in the People’s Republic of China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong 320
- 43. Modern Poetry of Taiwan 327
- 44. Homoeroticism in Modern Chinese Literature 336
- 45. Contemporary Urban Fiction: Rewriting the City 345
- 46. Xi Xi and Tales of Hong Kong 355
- 47. Writing Taiwan’s Fin-de-Siècle Splendor: Zhu Tianwen and Zhu Tianxin 363
- 48. Wang Anyi 371
- 49. Wang Shuo 379
- 50. Commercialization of Literature in the Post-Mao Era: Yu Hua, Beauty Writers, and Youth Writers 386
- 51. Popular Genre Fiction: Science Fiction and Fantasy 394
- 52. Word and Image: Gao Xingjian 400
- 53. Hong Kong Voices: Literature from the Late Twentieth Century to the New Millennium 407
- 54. Avant-Garde Poetry in China Since the 1980s 414
- 55. Taiwan Literature in the Post–Martial Law Era 422
- 56. Speaking from the Margins: Yan Lianke 431
- 57. Internet Literature: From YY to MOOC 436
- Index 441
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface and Acknowledgments ix
- Chronology of Major Historical Events xi
-
Part I. Thematic Essays
- 1. Historical Overview 3
- 2. Modern Chinese Literature as an Institution: Canon and Literary History 27
- 3. Language and Literary Form 38
- 4. Literary Communities and the Production of Literature 46
- 5. Between Tradition and Modernity: Contested Classical Poetry 55
- 6. Diaspora in Modern Chinese Literature 62
- 7. Sinophone Literature 72
- 8. Chinese Literature and Film Adaptation 80
-
Part II. Authors, Works, Schools
- 9. The Late Qing Poetry Revolution: Liang Qichao, Huang Zunxian, and Chinese Literary Modernity 89
- 10. The Uses of Fiction: Liang Qichao and His Contemporaries 97
- 11. Late Qing Fiction 104
- 12. Zhou Shoujuan’s Love Stories and Mandarin Ducks and Butterflies Fiction 111
- 13. Form and Reform: New Poetry and the Crescent Moon Society 121
- 14. Reconsidering the Origins of Modern Chinese Women’s Writing 128
- 15. The Madman That Was Ah Q: Tradition and Modernity in Lu Xun’s Fiction 136
- 16. Romantic Sentiment and the Problem of the Subject: Yu Dafu 145
- 17. Feminism and Revolution: The Work and Life of Ding Ling 152
- 18. The Debate on Revolutionary Literature 159
- 19. Mao Dun, the Modern Novel, and the Representation of Women 163
- 20. Ba Jin’s Family: Fiction, Representation, and Relevance 169
- 21. Chinese Modernism: The New Sensationists 176
- 22. Shen Congwen and Imagined Native Communities 183
- 23. Xiao Hong’s Field of Life and Death 189
- 24. Performing the Nation: Chinese Drama and Theater 195
- 25. Cao Yu and Thunderstorm 205
- 26. The Reluctant Nihilism of Lao She’s Rickshaw 211
- 27. Eileen Chang and Narratives of Cities and Worlds 217
- 28. Literature and Politics: Mao Zedong’s “Yan’an Talks” and Party Rectification 224
- 29. Qian Zhongshu and Yang Jiang: A Literary Marriage 231
- 30. Revolutionary Realism and Revolutionary Romanticism: Song of Youth 237
- 31. The Hundred Flowers: Qin Zhaoyang, Wang Meng, and Liu Binyan 245
- 32. Cold War Fiction from Taiwan and the Modernists 250
- 33. Nativism and Localism in Taiwanese Literature 258
- 34. The Cultural Revolution Model Theater 267
- 35. Martial Arts Fiction and Jin Yong 274
- 36. Taiwan Romance: Qiong Yao and San Mao 280
- 37. Misty Poetry 286
- 38. Scar Literature and the Memory of Trauma 293
- 39. Culture Against Politics: Roots-Seeking Literature 299
- 40. Mo Yan 307
- 41. Avant-Garde Fiction in Post-Mao China 313
- 42. Contemporary Experimental Theaters in the People’s Republic of China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong 320
- 43. Modern Poetry of Taiwan 327
- 44. Homoeroticism in Modern Chinese Literature 336
- 45. Contemporary Urban Fiction: Rewriting the City 345
- 46. Xi Xi and Tales of Hong Kong 355
- 47. Writing Taiwan’s Fin-de-Siècle Splendor: Zhu Tianwen and Zhu Tianxin 363
- 48. Wang Anyi 371
- 49. Wang Shuo 379
- 50. Commercialization of Literature in the Post-Mao Era: Yu Hua, Beauty Writers, and Youth Writers 386
- 51. Popular Genre Fiction: Science Fiction and Fantasy 394
- 52. Word and Image: Gao Xingjian 400
- 53. Hong Kong Voices: Literature from the Late Twentieth Century to the New Millennium 407
- 54. Avant-Garde Poetry in China Since the 1980s 414
- 55. Taiwan Literature in the Post–Martial Law Era 422
- 56. Speaking from the Margins: Yan Lianke 431
- 57. Internet Literature: From YY to MOOC 436
- Index 441