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Writing Taiwan: A New Literary History [Kõva köide]

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Writing Taiwan is the first volume in English to examine the entire span of modern Taiwan literature, from the first decades of the twentieth century to the present. In this collection, leading literary scholars based in Taiwan and the United States consider prominent Taiwanese authors and works in genres including poetry, travel writing, and realist, modernist, and postmodern fiction. The diversity of Taiwan literature is signaled by the range of authors treated, including Yang Chichang, who studied Japanese literature in Tokyo in the early 1930s and wrote all of his own poetry and fiction in Japanese; Li Yongping, an ethnic Chinese born in Malaysia and educated in Taiwan and the United States; and Liu Daren, who was born in mainland China and effectively exiled from Taiwan in the 1970s on account of his political activism.Because the island of Taiwan spent the first half of the century as a colony of Japan and the second half in an umbilical relationship to China, its literature challenges basic assumptions about what constitutes a “national literature.” Several contributors directly address the methodological and epistemological issues involved in writing about “Taiwan literature.” Other contributors investigate the cultural and political grounds from which specific genres and literary movements emerged. Still others explore themes of history and memory in Taiwan literature and tropes of space and geography, looking at representations of boundaries as well as the boundary-crossing global flows of commodities and capital. Like Taiwan’s history, modern Taiwan literature is rife with conflicting legacies and impulses. Writing Taiwan reveals a sense of its richness and diversity to English-language readers.Contributors. Yomi Braester, Sung-sheng Yvonne Chang, Fangming Chen, Lingchei Letty Chen, Chaoyang Liao, Ping-hui Liao, Joyce C. H. Liu, Kim-chu Ng, Carlos Rojas, Xiaobing Tang, Ban Wang, David Der-wei Wang, Gang Gary Xu, Michelle Yeh, Fenghuang Ying The first comprehensive study in English of the cultural and literary dynamics of Taiwan from 1945, when Taiwan was returned to China after half-a-century of Japanese colonial rule, to date.

Arvustused

This is an original project, difficult to achieve, that updates scholarship on the literature of Taiwan. Its originality is strong and welcome.-Edward Gunn, author of Rewriting Chinese: Style and Innovation in Twentieth-Century Chinese Prose [ An] excellent book. . . . this is a conference volume, but either because conference planners were careful in extending invitations and assigning topics or because editors Wang and Rojas did masterful work in sorting and sifting submissions, Writing Taiwan succeeds in mustering disparate voices to address the central topic of the way in which Taiwan has been narrated into existence. - Thomas Morgan (Chinese Literature) The volume, in fact, works wonderfully as a useful guide for literary scholars, pointing to accessible pathways to a very rich field for research and provocatively reconfiguring the current shape of Chinese literary studies. Anyone who is interested in transnational literary studies, particularly in relation to Asian literature and literatures in Chinese, will find something in this volume to help construct new theoretical and referential frameworks for his or her research. - Kuei-Fen Chiu (Journal of Asian Studies)

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The first comprehensive study in English of the cultural and literary dynamics of Taiwan from 1945 to the present.
Preface vii
David Der-wei Wang
Introduction 1(16)
Carlos Rojas
PART ONE: THE LIMITS OF TAIWAN LITERATURE
Representing Taiwan: Shifting Geopolitical Frameworks
17(9)
Sung-sheng Yvonne Chang
Postmodern or Postcolonial? An Inquiry into Postwar Taiwanese Literary History
26(25)
Fangming Chen
On the Concept of Taiwan Literature
51(42)
Xiaobing Tang
PART TWO: CULTURAL POLITICS
The Importance of Being Perverse: China and Taiwan, 1931--1937
93(20)
Joyce C. H. Liu
`On Our Destitute Dinner Table': Modern Poetry Quarterly in the 1950s
113(27)
Michelle Yeh
The Literary Development of Zhong Lihe and Postcolonial Discourse in Taiwan
140(16)
Fenghuang Ying
Wang Wenxing's Backed against the Sea, Parts I and II: The Meaning of Modernism in Taiwan's Contemporary Literature
156(25)
Sung-sheng Yvonne Chang
PART THREE: HISTORY, TRUTH, AND TEXTUAL ARTIFICE
The Monster That Is History: Jiang Gui's A Tale of Modern Monsters
181(32)
David Der-wei Wang
Taiwanese Identity and the Crisis of Memory: Post-Chiang Mystery
213(20)
Yomi Braester
Doubled Configuration: Reading Su Weizhen's Theatricality
233(20)
Gang Gary Xu
Techniques behind Lies and the Artistry of Truth: Writing about the Writings of Zhang Dachun
253(32)
Kim-chu Ng
PART FOUR: SPECTRAL TOPOGRAPHIES AND CIRCUITS OF DESIRE
Travel in Early-Twentieth-Century Asia: On Wu Zhuoliu's ``Nanking Journals'' and His Notion of Taiwan's Alternative Modernity
285(16)
Ping-hui Liao
Mapping Identity in a Postcolonial City: Intertextuality and Cultural Hybridity in Zhu Tianxin's Ancient Capital
301(23)
Lingchei Letty Chen
Li Yongping and Spectral Cartography
324(24)
Carlos Rojas
History, Exchange, and the Object Voice: Reading Li Ang's The Strange Garden and All Sticks Are Welcome in the Censer of Beigang
348(22)
Chaoyang Liao
Reenchanting the Image in Global Culture: Reification and Nostalgia in Zhu Tianwen's Fiction
370(19)
Ban Wang
Appendix: Chinese Characters for Authors' Names and Titles of Works 389(6)
Contributors 395(2)
Index 397


David Der-wei Wang is Edward C. Henderson Professor of Chinese Literature at Harvard University. He is the author of numerous books, including The Monster That Is History: History, Violence, and Fictional Writing in Twentieth-Century China.

Carlos Rojas is Assistant Professor of Modern Chinese Literature and Film at the University of Florida.