Description

Book Synopsis
An engagingly written critical genealogy of "love" in modern Chinese literature, thought, and popular culture.

Trade Review
"Haiyan Lee's new book is a solid, carefully structured and thoughtfully argued theoretical account of the centrality of emotion in the transformation of modernity and the construction of the modern self in China from 1900 to 1950. Interdisciplinary in nature, the book encompasses literature, modern social history and cultural studies Haiyan Lee's book is an ambitious and interesting project, to be lauded for the ways it synthesizes complex and contentious theoretical issues." -- The China Quarterly
"What I find most impressive about this study is the wealth of readings Lee offers. Revolution of the Heart is a very well-researched book, and Lee's thesis is presented clearly, forcefully, and within well-constructed literary and critical contexts." -- Sean Macdonald * Chinese Literature *
"Revolution of the Heart begins weeping, in the late Qing, and ends wailing, roughly a century later. In the pages between, Haiyan Lee makes a powerful argument for the centrality of feeling—especially romantic love—to the imagination of the nation, reform, and revolution in twentieth-century China." -- Alexander des Forges
"I fully recommend Revolution of the Heart, and congratulate Haiyan Lee for helping us to understand more deeply the multifaceted transformations of sentiment in the first half of 20th-century China." –Wendy Larson, University of Oregon
"Haiyan Lee should be congratulated for producing a genealogy of love that is replete with keen insights and observations. Her postmodernist and poststructuralist readings of the text are perceptive and incisive. Lee's book is a testimony of how postmodernist and poststructuralist approaches, when employed judiciously and grounded empirically, can enrich our understanding of history." -- Yung-chen Chiang
"[A]n exceptionally well-researched and well-argued study on an important topic. . . . . With excellent historical contextualization and appropriate attention to secondary and primary sources, the book boasts both depth and breadth." -- The China Journal

Table of Contents
Contents Acknowledgments ix Abbreviations xxx Introduction: What's Love Got to Do with It? 1 Part One. The Confucian Structure of Feeling 00 1. The Cult of Qing (Sentiment) 00 2. Virtue and the Novel of Sentiment 00 Part Two. The Enlightenment Structure of Feeling 00 3. The Age of Romance 00 4. The Micropolitics of Love 00 5. The Historical Epistemology of Sex 00 Part Three. The Revolutionary Structure of Feeling 00 6. The Problem of National Sympathy 00 7. The Revolution of the Heart 00 Conclusion: The Intimate Conflicts of Modernity 00 Reference Matter Notes 00 References 00 Index 00

Revolution of the Heart

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    A Paperback / softback by Haiyan Lee

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      Publisher: Stanford University Press
      Publication Date: 19/03/2010
      ISBN13: 9780804773270, 978-0804773270
      ISBN10: 0804773270

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      An engagingly written critical genealogy of "love" in modern Chinese literature, thought, and popular culture.

      Trade Review
      "Haiyan Lee's new book is a solid, carefully structured and thoughtfully argued theoretical account of the centrality of emotion in the transformation of modernity and the construction of the modern self in China from 1900 to 1950. Interdisciplinary in nature, the book encompasses literature, modern social history and cultural studies Haiyan Lee's book is an ambitious and interesting project, to be lauded for the ways it synthesizes complex and contentious theoretical issues." -- The China Quarterly
      "What I find most impressive about this study is the wealth of readings Lee offers. Revolution of the Heart is a very well-researched book, and Lee's thesis is presented clearly, forcefully, and within well-constructed literary and critical contexts." -- Sean Macdonald * Chinese Literature *
      "Revolution of the Heart begins weeping, in the late Qing, and ends wailing, roughly a century later. In the pages between, Haiyan Lee makes a powerful argument for the centrality of feeling—especially romantic love—to the imagination of the nation, reform, and revolution in twentieth-century China." -- Alexander des Forges
      "I fully recommend Revolution of the Heart, and congratulate Haiyan Lee for helping us to understand more deeply the multifaceted transformations of sentiment in the first half of 20th-century China." –Wendy Larson, University of Oregon
      "Haiyan Lee should be congratulated for producing a genealogy of love that is replete with keen insights and observations. Her postmodernist and poststructuralist readings of the text are perceptive and incisive. Lee's book is a testimony of how postmodernist and poststructuralist approaches, when employed judiciously and grounded empirically, can enrich our understanding of history." -- Yung-chen Chiang
      "[A]n exceptionally well-researched and well-argued study on an important topic. . . . . With excellent historical contextualization and appropriate attention to secondary and primary sources, the book boasts both depth and breadth." -- The China Journal

      Table of Contents
      Contents Acknowledgments ix Abbreviations xxx Introduction: What's Love Got to Do with It? 1 Part One. The Confucian Structure of Feeling 00 1. The Cult of Qing (Sentiment) 00 2. Virtue and the Novel of Sentiment 00 Part Two. The Enlightenment Structure of Feeling 00 3. The Age of Romance 00 4. The Micropolitics of Love 00 5. The Historical Epistemology of Sex 00 Part Three. The Revolutionary Structure of Feeling 00 6. The Problem of National Sympathy 00 7. The Revolution of the Heart 00 Conclusion: The Intimate Conflicts of Modernity 00 Reference Matter Notes 00 References 00 Index 00

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