Women, War, Domesticity
Shanghai Literature and Popular Culture of the 1940s
Biographical note
Nicole Huang, Ph.D. (1998) in East Asian Languages and Cultures, University of California, Los Angeles, is Assistant Professor of Chinese Literature at University of Wisconsin, Madison. She co-edited and introduced a collection of essays by Eileen Chang titled Written on Water (New York, 2005).
Readership
scholars and students in Asian Studies, particularly in the fields of modern Chinese literature and history, women and gender studies, those interested in narratives of war and atrocities of our time, and research on cities and urban cultures.
€140.00$181.00
Hubert Seiwert. In collaboration with Ma Xisha
An indispensable guide for all those who wish to gain a true understanding of the mechanics of Popular religious movements in historical and contemporary China.
€88.00$114.00
Michel Hockx
Convincingly breaking with the 'May Fourth' paradigm, Questions of Style argues a radically new way of understanding the relationship between New Literature and other styles of modern Chinese writing.
€142.00$184.00
Daria Berg
A dystopian satire, the Xingshi Yinyuan Zhuan provides fascinating insights into late imperial China’s popular culture. Using an array of sources, Carnival in China develops a style of reading that explores the desires, dreams, fears and nightmares of seventeenth-century Chinese citizens.
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