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Regarding Frames explores the ways that literary comics engage
readers in the mutual construction of meaning. Part interpretive
criticism, part philosophical meditation, Regarding Frames:
Thinking with Comics in the Twenty-First Century explores the ways
that literary comics engage readers in the mutual construction of
meaning. Kwa draws from a wide range of philosophical, critical,
and theoretical texts to analyze the visual and verbal narrative
strategies that artists use. She examines the work of comic artists
Gabrielle Bell, Michael DeForge, Kevin Huizenga, Laura Park, and
Dash Shaw who construct their particular visions of the world.
These creators' experiments with form pose questions about the
difference between how things appear to be and how they are.
Regarding Frames makes a case for the rewards of close reading at
the surface.
The legend of Mulan--the daughter who disguises herself as a man,
dons her father's armor, and heads off to war in his place--remains
one of the most popular Chinese folktales despite (or because of)
its lack of supernatural demonstrations or interventions. This
volume offers lively translations of the earliest recorded version
of the legend and several later iterations of the tale (including
the screenplay of the hugely successful 1939 Chinese film Mulan
Joins the Army ), illustrating the many ways that reinterpretations
of this basic story reflect centuries of changes in Chinese
cultural, political, and sexual attitudes. An Introduction traces
the evolution of the Mulan legend and its significance in the
history of Chinese popular culture. Annotation explaining terms and
references unfamiliar to Western readers, a glossary, and a
comprehensive bibliography further enhance the value of this volume
for both scholars and students.
When it comes to really knowing a person, is what you see really
what you get? Is it ever all you get? In this first critical study
and annotated translation of the dramatic masterpiece Four Cries of
a Gibbon by the late-Ming dynasty Chinese playwright Xu Wei, author
Shiamin Kwa considers the ways that people encounter and understand
each other in extraordinary circumstances. With its tales of crimes
redressed in the next world and girls masquerading as men to
achieve everlasting fame, Four Cries of a Gibbon complicated issues
of self and identity when it appeared in the late Ming dynasty,
paving the way for increasingly nuanced reflections on such
questions in late Ming and early Qing fiction and drama. Beyond
their historical context, Xu Wei's influential plays serve as
testimony to what Kwa argues are universal strategies found within
drama. The heroes and heroines in these plays glide back and forth
across the borders of life and death, of male and female, as they
seek to articulate who they truly are. As the actors sort out these
truths onstage, the members of the audience are invited to consider
the truths that they live with offstage.
The legend of Mulan--the daughter who disguises herself as a man,
dons her father's armor, and heads off to war in his place--remains
one of the most popular Chinese folktales despite (or because of)
its lack of supernatural demonstrations or interventions. This
volume offers lively translations of the earliest recorded version
of the legend and several later iterations of the tale (including
the screenplay of the hugely successful 1939 Chinese film Mulan
Joins the Army ), illustrating the many ways that reinterpretations
of this basic story reflect centuries of changes in Chinese
cultural, political, and sexual attitudes. An Introduction traces
the evolution of the Mulan legend and its significance in the
history of Chinese popular culture. Annotation explaining terms and
references unfamiliar to Western readers, a glossary, and a
comprehensive bibliography further enhance the value of this volume
for both scholars and students.
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