Description

Book Synopsis

The questions of subjectivity and the literary style of realism, as manifested in Hu Feng''s theoretical writings and Lu Ling''s fictional writings, occupy a unique position in modern China. By looking more closely into the theoretical and fictional texts and the social-historical subtext, and through a re-examination of the issue of subjectivity and individualism, this book argues that individualism should not be treated as an ahistorical value-system, but understood within changing historical contexts; subjectivity should not be treated as an issue of personal choice, but as class-based and derived from collective community. To differentiate different subjectivities and the diversified foci of individualism in differing historical periods, Xiaoping Wang finds we need to explore the intellectuals'' cultural-political strategy by situating them in the particular historical conjuncture and in the particular cultural fields. With this hermeneutical practice, the politics of recognitio

Trade Review

Theoretically well-informed and methodologically rigorous, this outstanding study of the works of Hu Feng and Lu Ling incorporates the insights brought out by existing works, and departs from them by offering insightful, new interpretations through delving into the larger issues of cultural politics and ideologies during the radical revolutionary era of the 1930s and 1940s in modern China. This significant contribution substantially develops the present scholarship and will contribute significantly to the scholarship on modern Chinese literature and culture studies.

-- Liu Kang, Duke University

Through analysis of the history and work of Hu Feng and his student Lu Ling, Xiaoping Wang presents a nuanced interpretation of both supportive and oppositional theories bedeviling literary intellectuals and authorities in twentieth century China. Two key concepts, individualism and subjectivity, anchor this rich study, which teases out the fascinating evolution of a modern Chinese literature complicated by a multifaceted history. This is an excellent book for anyone interested in the complex history of the literary and intellectual field in modern China.

-- Wendy Larson, University of Oregon

Table of Contents

Introduction

Part I Hu Feng’s Notion of “Subjective Fighting Spirit”

Chapter One

Cultural Capital, Hegemony and the Zeitgeist

Chapter Two

Intellectuals’ Politics and a Bourgeois Subjectivity

Part II Subjectivity in Lu Ling’s Fiction

Chapter Three

Subjectivity in Loss: Disintegration of Traditional Family and Emergence of Desire

Chapter Four

Subjectivity in Search of: “Bildungsroman” of Modern Chinese Intellectuals

Chapter Five

Subjectivity in Vain: A Fable of the Failure of Bourgeois Social Reforms

Chapter Six

Intellectuals in Predicament: Other Stories

Part III The People and the Class Consciousness

Chapter Seven

Politics of Recognition and Politics of Style

Chapter Eight

Self-Other Relationship and the Other as the People

Chapter Nine

Lu Ling’s Theory and His Fiction

Conclusion

Index

About the Author

Subjectivity and Realism in Modern Chinese

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    A Hardback by Xiaoping Wang

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      View other formats and editions of Subjectivity and Realism in Modern Chinese by Xiaoping Wang

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/15/2022 12:03:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498566193, 978-1498566193
      ISBN10: 1498566197

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The questions of subjectivity and the literary style of realism, as manifested in Hu Feng''s theoretical writings and Lu Ling''s fictional writings, occupy a unique position in modern China. By looking more closely into the theoretical and fictional texts and the social-historical subtext, and through a re-examination of the issue of subjectivity and individualism, this book argues that individualism should not be treated as an ahistorical value-system, but understood within changing historical contexts; subjectivity should not be treated as an issue of personal choice, but as class-based and derived from collective community. To differentiate different subjectivities and the diversified foci of individualism in differing historical periods, Xiaoping Wang finds we need to explore the intellectuals'' cultural-political strategy by situating them in the particular historical conjuncture and in the particular cultural fields. With this hermeneutical practice, the politics of recognitio

      Trade Review

      Theoretically well-informed and methodologically rigorous, this outstanding study of the works of Hu Feng and Lu Ling incorporates the insights brought out by existing works, and departs from them by offering insightful, new interpretations through delving into the larger issues of cultural politics and ideologies during the radical revolutionary era of the 1930s and 1940s in modern China. This significant contribution substantially develops the present scholarship and will contribute significantly to the scholarship on modern Chinese literature and culture studies.

      -- Liu Kang, Duke University

      Through analysis of the history and work of Hu Feng and his student Lu Ling, Xiaoping Wang presents a nuanced interpretation of both supportive and oppositional theories bedeviling literary intellectuals and authorities in twentieth century China. Two key concepts, individualism and subjectivity, anchor this rich study, which teases out the fascinating evolution of a modern Chinese literature complicated by a multifaceted history. This is an excellent book for anyone interested in the complex history of the literary and intellectual field in modern China.

      -- Wendy Larson, University of Oregon

      Table of Contents

      Introduction

      Part I Hu Feng’s Notion of “Subjective Fighting Spirit”

      Chapter One

      Cultural Capital, Hegemony and the Zeitgeist

      Chapter Two

      Intellectuals’ Politics and a Bourgeois Subjectivity

      Part II Subjectivity in Lu Ling’s Fiction

      Chapter Three

      Subjectivity in Loss: Disintegration of Traditional Family and Emergence of Desire

      Chapter Four

      Subjectivity in Search of: “Bildungsroman” of Modern Chinese Intellectuals

      Chapter Five

      Subjectivity in Vain: A Fable of the Failure of Bourgeois Social Reforms

      Chapter Six

      Intellectuals in Predicament: Other Stories

      Part III The People and the Class Consciousness

      Chapter Seven

      Politics of Recognition and Politics of Style

      Chapter Eight

      Self-Other Relationship and the Other as the People

      Chapter Nine

      Lu Ling’s Theory and His Fiction

      Conclusion

      Index

      About the Author

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