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Leaving the world to enter the world : Han Shaogong and Chinese root-seeking literature /Leenhouts, Mark, January 2005 (has links)
Proefschrift--Letteren--Universiteit Leiden, 2005. / Mention parallèle de titre ou de responsabilité : Yi chu shi dezhuang tai er ru shi. CNWS = Centrum voor niet-Westerse studies (= Research school of Asian, African and Amerindian studies). Bibliogr. p. 131-148.
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Between realist and allegorical discourse: a comparative study of Han Shaogongs fiction.January 1990 (has links)
by Ling Tun Ngai. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1990. / Bibliography: leaves [129]-139. / Acknowledgements --- p.i / Format Details --- p.ii / Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter 1. --- Realism in the Chinese Conte --- p.xt / Chapter 2. --- The Revival of Realism: Han Shaogong's Early Works --- p.44 / Chapter 3. --- Young Writers in Search of An Identity: The Search for Cultural Roots in 1985-86 --- p.65 / Chapter 4. --- Allegorical Depictions of the Chinese People: Han Shaogong's Search for Roots --- p.90 / Conclusion --- p.127 / Bibliography --- p.129 / Glossary --- p.138
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Dynasties of demons : cannibalism from Lu Xun to Yu HuaKeefer, James Robinson 05 1900 (has links)
Dynasties of Demons: Cannibalism from Lu Xun to Yu Hua focuses on the issue of
representations of the body in modern Chinese fiction. My interest concerns the relationship, or
correspondence between "textual" bodies and the physical "realities" they are meant to represent,
particularly where those representations involve the body as a discursive site for the intersection
of state ideology and the individual. The relationship between the body and the state has been a
question of profound significance for modern Chinese literati dating back to the late Qing, but it
was Lu Xun who, with the publication of his short story "Kuangren riji" (Diary of a
Madman), in 1918, initiated the literaty discourse on China's "apparent penchant for
cannibalizing its own people.
In the first chapter of my dissertation I discuss L u Xun's fiction by exploring two distinct,
though not mutually exclusive issues: (1) his diagnosis of China's debilitating "spiritual illness,"
which he characterized as being cannibalistic; (2) his highly inventive, counter-intuitive narrative
strategy for critiquing traditional Chinese culture without contributing to or stimulating his
reader's prurient interests in violent spectacle. To my knowledge I am the first critic of modern
Chinese literature to write about Lu Xun's erasure of the spectacle body.
In Chapters II, III and IV, I discuss the writers Han Shaogong, Mo Yan, and Yu Hua,
respectively, to illustrate that sixty years after Lu Xun's madman first "wrote" the prophetic
words, chi ren A (eat people), a number of post-Mao writers took up their pens to announce
that the human feast did not end with Confucianism; on the contrary, with the advent of Maoism
the feasting began in earnest.
Each of these post-Mao writers approaches the issue of China's "spiritual dysfunction"
from quite different perspectives, which I have characterized in the following way: Han
Shaogong (Atavism); Mo Yan (Ambivalent-Nostalgia); and Yu Hua (Deconstruction). As
becomes evident through my analysis of selected texts, despite their very significant differences
(personal, geographic, stylistic) all three writers come to oddly similar conclusions that are, in
and of themselves, not dissimilar to the conclusion arrived at by Lu Xun's madman.
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Dynasties of demons : cannibalism from Lu Xun to Yu HuaKeefer, James Robinson 05 1900 (has links)
Dynasties of Demons: Cannibalism from Lu Xun to Yu Hua focuses on the issue of
representations of the body in modern Chinese fiction. My interest concerns the relationship, or
correspondence between "textual" bodies and the physical "realities" they are meant to represent,
particularly where those representations involve the body as a discursive site for the intersection
of state ideology and the individual. The relationship between the body and the state has been a
question of profound significance for modern Chinese literati dating back to the late Qing, but it
was Lu Xun who, with the publication of his short story "Kuangren riji" (Diary of a
Madman), in 1918, initiated the literaty discourse on China's "apparent penchant for
cannibalizing its own people.
In the first chapter of my dissertation I discuss L u Xun's fiction by exploring two distinct,
though not mutually exclusive issues: (1) his diagnosis of China's debilitating "spiritual illness,"
which he characterized as being cannibalistic; (2) his highly inventive, counter-intuitive narrative
strategy for critiquing traditional Chinese culture without contributing to or stimulating his
reader's prurient interests in violent spectacle. To my knowledge I am the first critic of modern
Chinese literature to write about Lu Xun's erasure of the spectacle body.
In Chapters II, III and IV, I discuss the writers Han Shaogong, Mo Yan, and Yu Hua,
respectively, to illustrate that sixty years after Lu Xun's madman first "wrote" the prophetic
words, chi ren A (eat people), a number of post-Mao writers took up their pens to announce
that the human feast did not end with Confucianism; on the contrary, with the advent of Maoism
the feasting began in earnest.
Each of these post-Mao writers approaches the issue of China's "spiritual dysfunction"
from quite different perspectives, which I have characterized in the following way: Han
Shaogong (Atavism); Mo Yan (Ambivalent-Nostalgia); and Yu Hua (Deconstruction). As
becomes evident through my analysis of selected texts, despite their very significant differences
(personal, geographic, stylistic) all three writers come to oddly similar conclusions that are, in
and of themselves, not dissimilar to the conclusion arrived at by Lu Xun's madman. / Arts, Faculty of / Asian Studies, Department of / Graduate
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