Description

Book Synopsis
Tells the story of why China's entry into the modern age was not just traumatic, but uproarious. The author argues that this period from the 1890s to the 1930s transformed how Chinese people thought and talked about what is funny.

Trade Review
"Rea provides a map to a diverse comedic terrain between the late Qing dynasty and the Year of Humor (1933) that is richly populated with 'whimsical poets, vaudevillian entrepreneurs, renowned revilers, twee essayists, winking farceurs, and self-promoting jokesters'." -- Joe Sample China Quarterly "[An] excellent study." -- Paul Bevan SOAS Bulletin "Not only does The Age of Irreverence o?ffer an engaging new take on the cultural history of a momentous period, it also raises a number of leads for future research." Journal of Oriental Studies "The Age of Irreverence devotes meticulous attention to primary sources, and crafts its findings into a narrative of humor in popular culture from the turn of the twentieth century through the 1930s, with a nod in the epilogue toward the socialist era and beyond. As a scholarly intervention, however, the book's central argument most directly targets not history, but literary studies... certain to engage an audience." Frontiers of Literary Studies in China "Beautifully written... Rea has managed to write a very scholarly but nevertheless interesting and even entertaining book about a subject of considerable importance that has been neglected by literary scholars." Israeli Journal of Humor Research Abounds with examples and provides a learned apparatus... informative. Monumenta Serica

Table of Contents
Executive Preface Acknowledgments 1. Breaking into Laughter 2. Jokes 3. Play 4. Mockery 5. Farce 6. The Invention of Humor Epilogue Appendix 1: Selected Chinese Humor Collections, 1900--1937 Appendix 2: Which Classic? Editions and Paratexts Abbreviations Notes Glossary Bibliography Index

The Age of Irreverence

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    A Hardback by Christopher Rea

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      Publisher: University of California Press
      Publication Date: 08/09/2015
      ISBN13: 9780520283848, 978-0520283848
      ISBN10: 0520283848
      Also in:
      Asian history

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Tells the story of why China's entry into the modern age was not just traumatic, but uproarious. The author argues that this period from the 1890s to the 1930s transformed how Chinese people thought and talked about what is funny.

      Trade Review
      "Rea provides a map to a diverse comedic terrain between the late Qing dynasty and the Year of Humor (1933) that is richly populated with 'whimsical poets, vaudevillian entrepreneurs, renowned revilers, twee essayists, winking farceurs, and self-promoting jokesters'." -- Joe Sample China Quarterly "[An] excellent study." -- Paul Bevan SOAS Bulletin "Not only does The Age of Irreverence o?ffer an engaging new take on the cultural history of a momentous period, it also raises a number of leads for future research." Journal of Oriental Studies "The Age of Irreverence devotes meticulous attention to primary sources, and crafts its findings into a narrative of humor in popular culture from the turn of the twentieth century through the 1930s, with a nod in the epilogue toward the socialist era and beyond. As a scholarly intervention, however, the book's central argument most directly targets not history, but literary studies... certain to engage an audience." Frontiers of Literary Studies in China "Beautifully written... Rea has managed to write a very scholarly but nevertheless interesting and even entertaining book about a subject of considerable importance that has been neglected by literary scholars." Israeli Journal of Humor Research Abounds with examples and provides a learned apparatus... informative. Monumenta Serica

      Table of Contents
      Executive Preface Acknowledgments 1. Breaking into Laughter 2. Jokes 3. Play 4. Mockery 5. Farce 6. The Invention of Humor Epilogue Appendix 1: Selected Chinese Humor Collections, 1900--1937 Appendix 2: Which Classic? Editions and Paratexts Abbreviations Notes Glossary Bibliography Index

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