The Literature of China in the Twentieth Century

Przednia okładka
Columbia University Press, 1997 - 504

In this ground-breaking book, Bonnie S. McDougall and Kam Louie present the first comprehensive, integrated survey of twentieth-century Chinese literature. The Literature of China in the Twentieth Century traces the development of Chinese literature from the Boxer Rebellion, when the strains of Western influence first emerged, to the Tiananmen Massacre, when dissident poets, such as Bei Dao, earned international acclaim and indefinite exile from the mainland.

Each of the book's three chronological sections contains individual chapters examining the poetry, drama, and fiction of the period and includes an introduction outlining the historical and social context of the individual writers and their works. By analyzing this captivating literary tradition in terms of subject, theme, language, structure, style, intended audience, and cultural impact, the authors present a vivid picture of this important literature and a unique window on twentieth-century Chinese society.

 

Spis treści

Acknowledgements page
1
19001937
11
Towards a New Culture
13
The Transformation of the Past
31
The Narrative Subject
82
Writing Performance
153
19381965
187
Return to Tradition
189
19661989
323
The Reassertion of Modernity
325
Revolution and Reform
345
Exploring Alternatives
368
The Challenge of Modernity
421
Conclusion
441
Further Reading
449
Glossary of Titles and Authors
463

Searching for Typicality
208
The Challenge of Popularisation
261
Performing for Politics
285

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