The first of its kind in English, this anthology translates
twenty-two popular Chinese plays published between 1919 and 2000,
accompanied by a critical introduction to the historical, cultural,
and aesthetic evolution of twentieth-century Chinese spoken drama.
Primarily comprising works from the People's Republic of China,
though including representative plays from Hong Kong and Taiwan,
this collection not only showcases the revolutionary rethinking of
Chinese theater and performance that began in the late Qing
dynasty. It also highlights the formation of Chinese national and
gender identities during a period of tremendous social and
political change, along with the genesis of contemporary attitudes
toward the West.
Early twentieth-century Chinese drama embodies the uncertainty
and anxiety brought on by modernism, socialism, political conflict,
and war. After 1949, PRC theater painted a complex portrait of the
rise of communism in China, with the ideals of Chinese socialism
juxtaposed against the sacrifices made for a new society. The
Cultural Revolution promoted a "model theater" cultivated from the
achievements of earlier, leftist spoken drama, even though this
theater arose from the destruction of old culture. Post-Mao drama
addresses the socialist legacy and the attempts of a wounded nation
to reexamine its cultural roots. Taiwan's spoken drama synthesizes
regional and foreign traditions, and Hong Kong's spoken drama
sparkles as a hybrid of Chinese and Western influences. Immensely
valuable for cross-disciplinary, comparative, and performance
study, this anthology provides essential perspective on China's
theatricality and representation of political life.
General
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