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This book systematically studies the literary output of female
writers in contemporary China within the frame of literary theories
of feminism. With tools from psychoanalysis, structuralism and
deconstructionism, the two female authors, Meng and Dai, analyze 9
important female writers from 1919 to 1949, including Yin Lu, Xin
Bing, Ning Ding, Ailing Zhang. By decade, the authors provide a
comprehensive depiction of these female writers' historic-cultural
background as well as their reception by critics and audiences.
Navigating the complex relation between mainstream literary trends
and female writers’ practice, this text represents a landmark of
practice of literary feminist criticism within the Chinese
language.
In After the Post-Cold War eminent Chinese cultural critic Dai
Jinhua interrogates history, memory, and the future of China as a
global economic power in relation to its socialist past, profoundly
shaped by the Cold War. Drawing on Marxism, post-structuralism,
psychoanalysis, and feminist theory, Dai examines recent Chinese
films that erase the country's socialist history to show how such
erasure resignifies socialism's past as failure and thus forecloses
the imagining of a future beyond that of globalized capitalism. She
outlines the tension between China's embrace of the free market and
a regime dependent on a socialist imprimatur. She also offers a
genealogy of China's transformation from a source of revolutionary
power into a fountainhead of globalized modernity. This narrative,
Dai contends, leaves little hope of moving from the capitalist
degradation of the present into a radical future that might offer a
more socially just world.
In After the Post-Cold War eminent Chinese cultural critic Dai
Jinhua interrogates history, memory, and the future of China as a
global economic power in relation to its socialist past, profoundly
shaped by the Cold War. Drawing on Marxism, post-structuralism,
psychoanalysis, and feminist theory, Dai examines recent Chinese
films that erase the country's socialist history to show how such
erasure resignifies socialism's past as failure and thus forecloses
the imagining of a future beyond that of globalized capitalism. She
outlines the tension between China's embrace of the free market and
a regime dependent on a socialist imprimatur. She also offers a
genealogy of China's transformation from a source of revolutionary
power into a fountainhead of globalized modernity. This narrative,
Dai contends, leaves little hope of moving from the capitalist
degradation of the present into a radical future that might offer a
more socially just world.
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