£58.85

University of Michigan Press Going to the Countryside: The Rural in the Modern Chinese Cultural Imagination, 1915-1965 (China Understandings Today)

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Description

Product Description Since the beginning of the twentieth century, modern Chinese intellectuals, reformers, revolutionaries, leftist journalists, and idealistic youth had often crossed the increasing gap between the city and the countryside, which made the act of “going to the countryside” a distinctively modern experience and a continuous practice in China. Such a spatial crossing eventually culminated in the socialist state program of “down to the villages” movements during the 1960s and 1970s. What, then, was the special significance of “going to the countryside” before that era? Going to the Countryside deals with the cultural representations and practices of this practice between 1915 and 1965, focusing on individual homecoming, rural reconstruction, revolutionary journeys to Yan’an, the revolutionary “going down to the people” as well as going to the frontiers and rural hometowns for socialist construction. As part of the larger discourses of enlightenment, revolution, and socialist industrialization, “going to the countryside” entailed new ways of looking at the world and ordinary people, brought about new experiences of space and time, initiated new means of human communication and interaction, generated new forms of cultural production, revealed a fundamental epistemic shift in modern China, and ultimately created a new aesthetic, social, and political landscape.As a critical response to the “urban turn” in the past few decades, this book brings the rural back to the central concern of Chinese cultural studies and aims to bridge the city and the countryside as two types of important geographical entities, which have often remained as disparate scholarly subjects of inquiry in the current state of China studies. Chinese modernity has been characterized by a dual process that created problems from the vast gap between the city and the countryside but simultaneously initiated constant efforts to cope with the gap personally, collectively, and institutionally. The process of “crossing” two distinct geographical spaces was often presented as continuous explorations of various ways of establishing the connectivity, interaction, and relationship of these two imagined geographical entities. Going to the Countryside argues that this new body of cultural productions did not merely turn the rural into a constantly changing representational space; most importantly, the rural has been constructed as a distinct modern experiential and aesthetic realm characterized by revolutionary changes in human conceptions and sentiments. Review "Historically grounded and globally conscious study of the rural in the modern Chinese imagination." --The Journal of Asian Studies--Liang Luo "The Journal of Asian Studies""Yu Zhang's Going to the Countryside does the field of modern Chinese literary studies the tremendous service of bringing the rural back into focus, highlighting the richness and the often untapped potential of cinematic and literary--fictional as well as non-fictional--reworkings of the urban-rural interface. ...Going to the Countryside is likely to become required reading for students and scholars of Chinese Republican-era and early socialist-era literatures." --Modern Chinese Literature and Culture--Nicolai Volland "Modern Chinese Literature and Culture" About the Author Yu Zhang is Assistant Professor in the Department of Chinese Culture at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University.

Product Specifications

Format
hardcover
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
28 February 2020
Listed Since
25 June 2019

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