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From:China Media Research (Vol. 7, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe intellectual provides an important stimulus to push forward the society from which he or she is derived and culturally shaped. This paper reviews Chinese and Western intellectual traditions and their early...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 96, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedChina's fifty-five officially recognized "minority peoples" make up less than 9 percent of the People's Republic of China. Still, they number more than 130 million, and their literature deserves study both for its...
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From:MELUS (Vol. 26, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAt the turn into the twentieth century, American culture witnessed related literary and political shifts through which marginalized voices gained increased strength despite the severe racism that informed US laws and...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 95, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe Picun Literature Group has independently printed eight volumes of Picun literature since 2015 and released eleven volumes of the bimonthly literary magazine New Workers' Literature (Xin gongren wenxue) in electronic...
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From:Studies in the Literary Imagination (Vol. 46, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAs the first writer of Chinese descent to be published in North America, Edith Eaton, better known as Sui Sin Far, is today considered one of the most significant voices in American literary history, mainly because of...
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From:Chicago Review (Vol. 62, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedCai Qijiao stands out as a rare poet who extricated himself from the meshes of Socialist Realism under Mao Zedong, survived ostracism before and during the Cultural Revolution, and persisted in writing individually...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 74, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAfter more than two decades of vigorous literary development, China has witnessed the emergence of a cadre of talented novelists. Undaunted by a succession of political and economic upheavals, these writers are...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 82, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedSome meetings take time to happen. About eight years ago, I picked up a Chinese book with an intriguing title in the film section at one of those megabookstores in Beijing: Who Is My Mom's Boyfriend? It turned out to be...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 82, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAs the twenty-second Puterbaugh fellow in a forty-year tradition, Bei Dao joins the ranks of Octavio Paz, Edouard Glissant, and Czeslaw Milosz in being known not only--although principally--as a poet, but also for his...
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From:CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn his article "Disoriented Nationalist Discourse of the Wenxuan Group amidst Manchukuo's Anti-Modern Chorus" Chao Liu analyzes the proposal of "native-land literature" made by left-wing Chinese writers in occupied...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 82, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedBei Dao is the most distinguished Chinese poet of his generation and considered by many to be one of the major writers of modern China. Born Zhao Zhenkai on August 2, 1949, in Beijing, his pseudonym, Bei Dao, literally...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 74, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedWhat follows is the talk given at the Tattered Cover bookstore in Denver, Colorado, on 20 March 2000. Before I start, I should mention my American translator, Howard Goldblatt. My novels could have been translated by...
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From:Antipodes (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed"[...] the child Bob had been confused because his father, for all his professed hatred of the Yellow Peril, had made him visit the Yipsoons several times a year, particularly at Chinese new year, and he had maintained...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 96, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedThis was my everyday life: I would walk to the subway station, listen to Tae-yeon's new album on the train, and then walk to the coffee shop from the station. I always started listening to the first song; like reading a...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 75, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedI HAVE NO WAY of knowing whether it is fate that has pushed me onto this dais, but as various lucky coincidences have created this opportunity, I may as well call it fate. Putting aside discussion of the existence or...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 95, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedChinas "Battlers poetry" is written by members of the new precariat, especially rural-to-urban migrant workers. This is an exciting trend, both in its own right and when viewed as part of a more widely reported sense of...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 69, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedMa Yuan's literary strength lies in his narrative style. It is complex, consisting of different narrative voices whose self-consciousness contradict each other. This contradiction paradoxically creates a greater sense of...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 95, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedFu Qiuyun, also known as Xiaofu, is a young migrant worker from Henan, China, and also the organizer of the literature group in Picun (aka the Pi Village). Picun is an "urban village" or "village in the city," and the...
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From:World Literature Today (Vol. 82, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedIn early September 2007, the University of Notre Dame was honored to have the 2000 Nobel laureate in literature, Gao Xingjian (b. 1940), on campus for a week's worth of activities that included a public literary...