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Frontiers of Literary Studies in China

ISSN 1673-7318

ISSN 1673-7423(Online)

CN 11-5745/I

Postal Subscription Code 80-982

Front. Lit. Stud. China    2014, Vol. 8 Issue (1) : 101-125    https://doi.org/10.3868/s010-003-014-0006-7
research-article
Feminine and Masculine Dimensions of Feminist Thought and Transcultural Modernism in Republican China
Géraldine Fiss()
Departement of East Asian Languages and Cultures, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089, USA
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Abstract

This study examines critical essays and imaginative fiction by three key writers of the Republican period: Mao Dun, Ba Jin and Lu Yin. I argue that, while Mao Dun and Ba Jin fuse elements of classical Chinese and modern Western sources so as to create strong heroines and a critique of “new men” for the purpose of revolutionary cultural and national reform, Lu Yin foregrounds an inward examination of the self, multiple narrative points of view and a dialogical perspective which fuses her protagonists’ interior consciousness with external reality as well as other characters’ streams of feeling and thought. My reading of Lu Yin’s texts reveals that she not only succeeds in bringing communion and solace to her readers but also creates “moments of being,” markedly similar to Virginia Woolf’s modernist aesthetics and Walter Benjamin’s mosaic-like “moments of recognition,” which allow her characters to perceive “wholeness” from fragmentary flashes of understanding. These intense moments of awareness enhance Lu Yin’s dialogic imagination and enable her to create discursive feminine narratives that convey the full complexity of women’s consciousness while simultaneously resisting the male realist literary discourse and strengthening her feminist-activist agenda in the national public sphere.

Keywords Chinese feminism      feminine modernism      masculine feminist discourse      transcultural modernism      New woman      Mao Dun      Ba Jin      Lu Yin     
Issue Date: 16 May 2014
 Cite this article:   
Géraldine Fiss. Feminine and Masculine Dimensions of Feminist Thought and Transcultural Modernism in Republican China[J]. Front. Lit. Stud. China, 2014, 8(1): 101-125.
 URL:  
https://academic.hep.com.cn/flsc/EN/10.3868/s010-003-014-0006-7
https://academic.hep.com.cn/flsc/EN/Y2014/V8/I1/101
[1] David Hull. Value in What is Saved and What is Lost: Textology in Mao Dun’s Eclipse [J]. Front. Lit. Stud. China, 2016, 10(2): 204-233.
[2] Haili Kong. Disease and Humanity: Ba Jin and His Ward Four: A Wartime Novel of China[J]. Front Liter Stud Chin, 2012, 6(2): 198-207.
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