Description

Book Synopsis
Against prevailing views on what it means to enjoy power as individuals, cultures, or nations, this book looks at the making of cultural and national identities in modern China as building success from failure.

Trade Review
"Tsu's findings are compelling. She argues that in the wake of repeated military humiliations and the Western discourse on Chinese racial deficiency or inferiority, the formation of modern Chinese national identity was fueled by a self-perception as humiliated and deficient in a way the typically assumed patriotic pride and desire for sovereignty could never have done." -- Nations and Nationalism
"This is an important book. . . offering suggestive new insights through a genre-bending analysis that owes much to intellectual history and literary analysis but is beholden to neither. . . . Using foundational texts of Chinese modernity along with some texts scarcely noticed before, Tsu has defamiliarized China." -- Academia Sinica, Taiwan
"...a bold and useful book." -- Etudes Chinoises
"Failure, Nationalism, and Literature achieves two important features of excellent scholarship—it helps makes sense of the past in new and challenging ways and in so doing provides numerous new points of departure for future scholarly work. Moreover, it stands as an excellent example of the unique contribution first-rate literary analysis can make to enhancing our understanding of the complexity of China's path through the twentieth century. This is a seriously good read." -- The China Journal
"Tsu's book shows that China's national identity is premised upon a narrative of victimhood, and that this victimhood has become a rationale permitting all kinds of retaliatory action—avenging the injustices of the past becomes a nationalist project encased in a conception of a national identity of group humiliation. Tsu Jing's thesis about the widespread belief that 'the victim has a moral right to seek revenge' provides a rather unsettling contrast to the repeated government protestations about China's desires for a 'peaceful rise'." -- Journal of Contemporary History

Table of Contents
Contents Illustrations xxx Acknowledgments xxx Chapter 1: Failure and National Identity 1 Chapter 2: The Yellow Race 000 Chapter 3: The Menace of Race 000 Chapter 4: Loving the Nation, Preserving the Race 000 Chapter 5: The Quest for Beauty and Notions of Femininity 000 Chapter 6: Community of Expiation: Confessions, Masculinity, and Masochism 000 Chapter 7: Kumen, Cultural Suffering 000 Conclusion: The Emergence of Culture in Failure 000 Notes 000 Bibliography 000 Character List 000 Index 000

Failure Nationalism and Literature

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    A Hardback by Jing Tsu

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      View other formats and editions of Failure Nationalism and Literature by Jing Tsu

      Publisher: Stanford University Press
      Publication Date: 20/12/2005
      ISBN13: 9780804751766, 978-0804751766
      ISBN10: 0804751765

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Against prevailing views on what it means to enjoy power as individuals, cultures, or nations, this book looks at the making of cultural and national identities in modern China as building success from failure.

      Trade Review
      "Tsu's findings are compelling. She argues that in the wake of repeated military humiliations and the Western discourse on Chinese racial deficiency or inferiority, the formation of modern Chinese national identity was fueled by a self-perception as humiliated and deficient in a way the typically assumed patriotic pride and desire for sovereignty could never have done." -- Nations and Nationalism
      "This is an important book. . . offering suggestive new insights through a genre-bending analysis that owes much to intellectual history and literary analysis but is beholden to neither. . . . Using foundational texts of Chinese modernity along with some texts scarcely noticed before, Tsu has defamiliarized China." -- Academia Sinica, Taiwan
      "...a bold and useful book." -- Etudes Chinoises
      "Failure, Nationalism, and Literature achieves two important features of excellent scholarship—it helps makes sense of the past in new and challenging ways and in so doing provides numerous new points of departure for future scholarly work. Moreover, it stands as an excellent example of the unique contribution first-rate literary analysis can make to enhancing our understanding of the complexity of China's path through the twentieth century. This is a seriously good read." -- The China Journal
      "Tsu's book shows that China's national identity is premised upon a narrative of victimhood, and that this victimhood has become a rationale permitting all kinds of retaliatory action—avenging the injustices of the past becomes a nationalist project encased in a conception of a national identity of group humiliation. Tsu Jing's thesis about the widespread belief that 'the victim has a moral right to seek revenge' provides a rather unsettling contrast to the repeated government protestations about China's desires for a 'peaceful rise'." -- Journal of Contemporary History

      Table of Contents
      Contents Illustrations xxx Acknowledgments xxx Chapter 1: Failure and National Identity 1 Chapter 2: The Yellow Race 000 Chapter 3: The Menace of Race 000 Chapter 4: Loving the Nation, Preserving the Race 000 Chapter 5: The Quest for Beauty and Notions of Femininity 000 Chapter 6: Community of Expiation: Confessions, Masculinity, and Masochism 000 Chapter 7: Kumen, Cultural Suffering 000 Conclusion: The Emergence of Culture in Failure 000 Notes 000 Bibliography 000 Character List 000 Index 000

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