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Mapping Modern Beijing Weijie Song (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Rutgers University Department of Asian Languages and Cultures)

Mapping Modern Beijing By Weijie Song (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Rutgers University Department of Asian Languages and Cultures)

Summary

Mapping Modern Beijing investigates various modes of representing Beijing by writers travelling across mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and overseas Sinophone and non-Chinese communities.

Mapping Modern Beijing Summary

Mapping Modern Beijing: Space, Emotion, Literary Topography by Weijie Song (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Rutgers University Department of Asian Languages and Cultures)

"I have lived in Beijing for thirty years, but I can't say that I have yet comprehended this city," wrote Lao Xiang, the great Chinese novelist, in 1935. Mapping Modern Beijing explores the various ways novelists sought to understand and articulate China's second largest city in the first half of twentieth century. Song investigates five modes of representing Beijing: as a warped hometown, a city of snapshots and manners, an aesthetic city, an imperial capital in comparative and cross-cultural perspective, and a displaced city on the Sinophone and diasporic postmemory. Drawing from literary canons to exotic narratives, from modernist poetry to chivalric fantasy, from popular culture to urban planning, this book explores the complex nexus of urban spaces, archives of emotions, and literary topography of Beijing in its long journey from imperial capital to Republican city and to socialist metropolis. While most English-language literary studies of China focus on its rural locales, Song's study presents a welcome departure, expanding our understandings of Chinese literature into the urban and the modern.

Mapping Modern Beijing Reviews

"[Weijie Song] is engaging brilliantly in what I would call spatial reading... this book is of great value to the evolving study of modern and contemporary Chinese culture, particularly in responding to recent emphases on global and cosmopolitan perspectives and intercultural interactions, but also in creating a context in which to showcase major cultural figures who have not necessarily gotten the attention they deserve. * Charles A. Laughlin, Weedon Professor of East Asian Studies at the University of Virginia, Prism: Theory and Modern Chinese Literature *
The careful treatments of these cities and people's relationships with them make Shadow Modernism and Mapping Modern Beijing eminently rewarding reads. They shed new light on much familiar material while unearthing work that has escaped the attention of scholars to date. They also underscore why it is that these two cities, like a handful of other "world cities", have persisted as motors of cultural change down to the present. Both books are remarkable contributions and deserve close attention from historians, geographers, and urbanists well beyond the field of Chinese Studies. * Max D. Woodworth, Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review *

About Weijie Song (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Rutgers University Department of Asian Languages and Cultures)

Weijie Song is Associate Professor in the Department of Asian Languages and Cultures at Rutgers University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction: Affective Mapping of Modern Beijing Articulating Beijing in My Heart Emotion, Qing, and Chinese Urban Narrative Five Methods of Imagining Beijing Chapter 1: A Warped Hometown: Lao She and the Beijing Complex Utopianist (Dis)Enchantment, Materialized Desire, and Urban Darkness Atlas of Wartime Emotions Ideology and the Socialist Production of Space Teahouse, Warped Miniature, and Self- Mourning Chapter 2: Urban Snapshots and Manners: Zhang Henshui and the Beijing Dream Curiosity, Novelty, and the Ghost House The City and Its Family Romance An Unofficial History of Emotions Chapter 3: The Aesthetic versus the Political: Lin Huiyin and the City The Poetics and Politics of Urban Objects Passion and Pain in Place An Alternative Urban Blueprint Oblivion and Recollection Chapter 4: A Comparative Imperial Capital: Lin Yutang, Princess Der Ling, Victor Segalen, and the Views from Near and Afar An Ideal- Type City and the Performance of Pleasure The Twilight of Empire and the Disclosure of the Forbidden City Beneath the "Great Within," Horizontal Wells, and Spatial Exoticism Chapter 5: A Displaced City and Postmemory: Relocating Beijing in Sinophone Writing Food Memory, Emotional Topography, and Bittersweet Aftertaste Beijing Sojourn: Between Allergy and Eulogy In(Ex)clusion and Chivalric Geography Epilogue: Beijing and Beyond Urban Literature in Late Qing and Republican China Mapping Mainland Cities after 1949 Imagining Taipei, Hong Kong, and Beyond Selected Bibliography Index

Additional information

NPB9780190200671
9780190200671
0190200677
Mapping Modern Beijing: Space, Emotion, Literary Topography by Weijie Song (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Rutgers University Department of Asian Languages and Cultures)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2018-03-29
320
N/A
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