Frontiers of Literary Studies in China

ISSN 1673-7318

ISSN 1673-7423(Online)

CN 11-5745/I

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, Volume 11 Issue 4

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Orginal Article
Introduction: A Forum on Chen Yingzhen
LIU Zhuo
Front. Lit. Stud. China. 2017, 11 (4): 581-582.  
https://doi.org/10.3868/s010-006-017-0032-2

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The Narrative Method of Colonial History and Cultural Politics—Taiwanese Literature Studies in Japan
ZHAO Jinghua
Front. Lit. Stud. China. 2017, 11 (4): 583-597.  
https://doi.org/10.3868/s010-006-017-0033-9

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Starting with the debate on Taiwanese national consciousness between Chen Yingzhen and Japanese scholar Shozo Fujii, and Chen’s supporter Masayoshi Matsunaga around 2004, the paper examines the historiography of Taiwanese literature studies since postwar Japan. It is argued that Shozo Fujii’s study of Taiwanese literature during the Japanese occupation period is different from Yoshinori Kobayashi’s On Taiwan, which deliberately seeks to erase the sin of colonial rule. However, in applying Western theories mechanically it is indeed easy to end up on the opposite side of historical criticism, for the reason Shozo Fujii did not provide a necessary alert to the crux in Anderson’s theory. The argumentation among the three parties not only involves how to understand Taiwanese history and literature in the complex structure of East Asia, but more importantly about how to make value judgments regarding two hundred years of colonialism.

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Nihilism of Taiwanese Youth in the 1950s and 1960s: Reinterpreting Modernism and the Left-Wing*
LI Na
Front. Lit. Stud. China. 2017, 11 (4): 598-636.  
https://doi.org/10.3868/s010-006-017-0034-6

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This paper presents a comparative analysis on Chen Yingzhen’s “Wo de didi Kangxiong” (“My brother Kangxiong”) and Wang Shangyi’s “Ye gezi de huanghun” (“Wild pigeon’s dusk”) in the cultural-historical context of Taiwan in 1960s, in the aim of exploring the origin of “nihilism” which had been prevailed among Taiwan youth from 1950s to 1960s. Furthermore, the paper reexamines the hidden but intimate relationship between modernism and left-wing intellectuals.

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A Region Reference to Chen Yingzhen’s Literature: A Perspective from Korea
Gwang-Seok YEON
Front. Lit. Stud. China. 2017, 11 (4): 637-665.  
https://doi.org/10.3868/s010-006-017-0035-3

Abstract   PDF (331KB)

This essay considers Taiwanese thinker Chen Yingzhen as a contemporary medium of history so as to investigate his decades-long literary praxis. In particular, it analyzes the ways in which Chen Yingzhen powerfully epitomizes the “(im)possibility of love” through the problematic of historical integration: a problematic speaking to tradition, colonialism, and the Cold War/neocolonialism all at once. In virtue of his literary and intellectual accomplishment, this essay attends to the three key notions of “division,” “civil war,” and “people” as cross-referencing domains. At the same time, via a cross-referencing framework, this essay offers a perspective from Korea, demonstrating the historical specificities of South Korea by situating South Korea in the context of the region of East Asia.

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Globalization, Women, and Poverty: A Transcultural Reading of Sheng Keyi’s Northern Girls
Kay Schaffer, Xianlin SONG
Front. Lit. Stud. China. 2017, 11 (4): 666-687.  
https://doi.org/10.3868/s010-006-017-0036-0

Abstract   PDF (324KB)

China’s rise within a global economy has had diverse consequences for Chinese women. For the super rich and the rising middle class, it has offered opportunities for vast wealth. For the newly emergent underclass of migrant workers who have flooded to the cities, it has engendered exploitative states of vulnerability, especially for rural women. In this paper we locate our inquiry in the context of globalization and its impact on rural women’s lives as witnessed through the medium of a unique and distinctive women’s life narrative, Sheng Keyi’s Bei mei (Northern Girls). The text testifies to the underside of women’s lives within the new market economy, documenting the cruelty of global capitalism. It presents an alternative version of the history of China’s rise in the global economy and maps a trajectory of increasing inequality from a previously silenced female perspective. Sheng Keyi’s world speaks to the sordid world of women, the world of yin. It coexists with the dizzying ascent of the yang―as the powerful nation grapples with social inequality and fragmentation. In its international circulation, Northern Girls opens readers to the contradictions and ambivalent aspects of China’s economic rise and its consequences specifically for migrant women.

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The Ideology of “Swings between Reality and Illusion” in Mo Yan’s Pow!
Jerry XIE
Front. Lit. Stud. China. 2017, 11 (4): 688-738.  
https://doi.org/10.3868/s010-006-017-0037-7

Abstract   PDF (495KB)

According to Angelica Duran and Yuhan Huang, Mo Yan’s “artistic works” are “towering within the literatures of the world.” His novel Si shi yi pao (Pow!, 2012) offers one of the clearest recent examples of what Shelley W. Chan calls Mo’s “postmodern playfulness.” In his afterword to Pow! Mo says that the story “gives way to an improvisation that swings between reality and illusion,” thus suggesting the notion of “hallucinatory realism” as a “blending” or “merging” of the illusory and the real. This article examines the ideology—that is, the class politics of consciousness—of this swingy postmodern storytelling, taking a critical view of Mo’s playfully bold assertion: “I’ve always taken pride in my lack of ideology, especially when I’m writing.” I argue that the swinginess of “imagination” in Pow! embodies what Marx calls a “happy confusion” that (re)articulates the “post”-class doctrine of “combine two into one.”

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“The Tastes of Asia”: Leung Ping-kwan, Foodscape, and the Politics of Representation
Songjian ZHANG
Front. Lit. Stud. China. 2017, 11 (4): 739-775.  
https://doi.org/10.3868/s010-006-017-0038-4

Abstract   PDF (357KB)

Leung Ping-kwan (1949–2013), a leading writer and cultural critic of Hong Kong, has around ten collections of poems published over the past few decades. Beginning in 1997, Leung wrote about food, making significant contributions to poetry in Chinese. Drawing literary texts from Leung’s collections of poetry, this paper aims to cast light on the role that Leung has played in the shaping of foodscape poetics and how he elaborates and addresses historical memory and cultural politics. In addition, this paper contends that his deconstruction of nationalism and an emphasis on “wisdom of peoples’ livlihood” lies at the core of Leung’s foodscape poetics, and they constitute a “positionality” rooted in his experience in Hong Kong.

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9 articles