{"product_id":"print-profit-and-perception-ideas-information-and-knowledge-in-chinese-societies-1895-1949-9789004259102","title":"Print, Profit, and Perception: Ideas, Information and Knowledge in Chinese Societies, 1895-1949","description":"\u003cb\u003eBook Synopsis\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003ePrint, Profit, and Perception examines the dynamic cross-cultural exchanges occurring in China and Taiwan from the first Sino-Japanese War to the mid-twentieth century. Drawing examples from various genres, this interdisciplinary volume presents nine empirically grounded case studies on the growth in the production, dissemination and consumption of texts, which lay behind a dramatic expansion of knowledge. The chapters collectively address the co-existence of globalization and localization processes in the period.  By taking into account intra-Asian cultural encounters and tracing the multiple competing forces encountered by many, this book offers a fresh and compelling take on how individuals and social groups participated in transnational conceptual flows.  Contributors include: Paul Bailey, Che-chia Chang, Elizabeth Emrich, Tze-ki Hon, Max K.W. Huang, Mei-e Huang, Mike Shi-chi Lan, Pei-yin Lin, and Weipin Tsai.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cb\u003eTrade Review\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\"Pei-yin Lin and Weipin Tsai deserve recognition for assembling a diverse and thought provoking collection of essays on the history of Chinese globalization and localization in the first half of the twentieth century. [...] the contributors to Print, Profit, and Perception cogently raise many important questions, fill in historical gaps, and open up new discursive space for early twentieth century Chinese historical and literary studies.\" Bert Scruggs, University of California, Irvine, MCLC    \"The book stands out from the rest by adopting a small-scale, niche approach to that complex period. Several core themes make it highly coherent, and the range of topics covered by its nine chapters account for its diversity and relevance to scholars with various research interests. [...] This volume is definitely worthy of consideration by scholars of modern Chinese intellectual, literary, and medical history, nationalism, global and regional cultural exchange, print and popular media, Taiwan or Japanese studies [...] it guarantees a challenging and entertaining reading experience, with new stories well integrated into a coherent frame narrative, illustrated with numerous reproductions of journal and newspaper covers, articles, advertisements, and woodblock art.\"  Adina Zemanek, Jagiellonian University (International Journal of Taiwan Studies, 1, 2018)\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cb\u003eTable of Contents\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003eACKNOWLEDGEMENTS  INTRODUCTION Pei-yin Lin \u0026amp; Weipin Tsai Chinese modernities revisited: globalization and localization\t Fluid modernity and ideas\t Print, profit and perceptions\t  1. CULTURAL CONNECTIONS IN A NEW GLOBAL SPACE: LI SHIZENG AND THE CHINESE FRANCOPHILE PROJECT IN THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY Paul J. Bailey Early years in France\t Sino-French cultural interaction\t Li Shizeng’s philosophy of work-study Conclusion  2. HEALTH AND HYGIENE IN LATE QING CHINA AS SEEN THROUGH THE EYES OF JAPANESE TRAVELERS\t Che-chia Chang Networks of travelers\t Categories of traveler\t First impressions: Dirty! Dirty! Dirty!\t Understanding the Japanese viewpoint\t Conclusion\t  3. MODERNITY THROUGH EXPERIMENTATION: LU XUN AND THE MODERN CHINESE WOODCUT MOVEMENT\t Elizabeth Emrich Alternative modernities and Lu Xun’s “Grabism”\t Lu Xun in Shanghai and his Translations on Art\t Lu Xun and woodcut publications\t Humanism and social construction in woodblock prints\t Lu Xun and Woodcut Print Societies\t Conclusion\t  4. TECHNOLOGY, MARKETS, AND SOCIAL CHANGE: PRINT CAPITALISM IN EARLY TWENTIETH-CENTURY CHINA Tze-ki Hon Local initiatives and domestic factors in technology transfer\t Markets, circulation and profits\t National learning as cultural capital\t Professional geographers and public intellectuals\t Conclusion\t  5. MEDICAL ADVERTISING AND CULTURAL TRANSLATION: THE CASE OF SHENBAO IN EARLY TWENTIETH-CENTURY CHINA\t Max K. W. Huang Understanding the human body in early republican China\t Medical Advertising and Cultural Translation\t Conclusion  6. PLANET IN PRINT: THE SCIENTIFIC IMAGINATION IN ZHENG KUNWU’S FICTION DURING TAIWAN’S COLONIAL PERIOD\t Mei-e Huang From astronomical reports to fiction writing\t Scientific fantasy and humanistic reality\t Between science fiction and detective story Conclusion  7. SHAPING PERCEPTION OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR: A STUDY OF TEXTBOOKS IN TAIWAN IN THE 1940s Shi-chi Mike Lan Presentation of the War in Japanese colonial texts before 1945\t The War in Chinese nationalist texts after 1945\t Localizing the War in textbooks: Before and after 1945\t Conclusion  8. ENVISIONING THE READING PUBLIC – PROFIT MOTIVES OF A CHINESE-LANGUAGE TABLOID IN WARTIME TAIWAN Pei-yin Lin Positioning the Chinese-language tabloids in colonial Taiwan\t Chinese literati-courtesan connections and Western exotica\t Appropriating and speculating about love From freedom of love to condemnation of unrestrained free love\t Alternative modernity and re-appropriation of love\t Conclusion\t  9. THE FIRST CASUALTY: TRUTH, LIES AND COMMERCIAL OPPORTUNISM IN CHINESE NEWSPAPERS DURING THE FIRST SINO-JAPANESE WAR Weipin Tsai War reporting in the West and in China in the second half of the nineteenth century\t Battle-ready and eager for the fight\t The war for readership\t In the newspapers’ defense\t Conclusion\t  BIBLIOGRAPHY","brand":"Brill","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":53210642121047,"sku":"9789004259102","price":140.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":false}],"url":"https:\/\/bookcurl.com\/products\/print-profit-and-perception-ideas-information-and-knowledge-in-chinese-societies-1895-1949-9789004259102","provider":"Book Curl","version":"1.0","type":"link"}