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The avant-garde elements in the May Fourth New Literature Movement
CHEN Sihe
Frontiers of Literary Studies in China. 2007, 1 (2): 163-196.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11702-007-0008-4
The May Fourth new literature appeared in the early twentieth century China while the avant-garde was sweeping over the West. Both could be defined as radical literary movements by such characteristics as storming criticism of politics, subversive standpoints on traditional culture, language experiments for thoroughly novel forms and criticism with the aestheticism for l art pour l (art art for art s sake). The avant-garde elements in the new literature, by contrast, are believed able to help us see two kinds of shifts in the course of twentieth-century literature, that is, to see how it shifted from classical to modern literature in the last century: one change was the natural flow of the mainstream literature, subject to the social development and changes, and the other is an avant-garde movement that took a radical stance against the status quo, and was led by ideals of social reforms aiming to realize beyond the generation.
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Taste and resistance: Lu Xun’s scholarly style and its reception
CHEN Pingyuan
Frontiers of Literary Studies in China. 2007, 1 (2): 213-249.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11702-007-0010-x
Lu Xun s achievements as a philosopher and writer were confirmed in the twentieth century in China, but little attention has been paid to Lu Xun as a scholar. Admittedly, the revolutionary nature of his A Brief History of Chinese Fiction (Zhongguo xiaoshuo shil?e) has been universally acknowledged in scholarly circles and the book has been quoted in many works. However, Lu Xun s scholarly ideals, his methods, and the distinctive scholarly style that he employed have not received enough attention. Lu Xun s choice of a particular scholarly style, as a philosopher, a writer, and a scholar, is closely interrelated with the development of the scholarship in China. This article is therefore limited to Lu Xun and attempts to expose one side of Chinese scholarship that has been overlooked while analyzing the origins and development of Lu Xun s scholarly style (忦[fe嘜Sshuxue wenti)1.
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