Zhou Zouren and an Alternative Chinese Response to Modernity

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2000-08-15
Publisher(s): Harvard Univ Council on East Asian
List Price: $44.40

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Summary

This book explores the issues of nation and modernity in China by focusing on the work of Zhou Zuoren (1885-1967), one of the most controversial of modern Chinese intellectuals and brother of the writer Lu Xun. Zhou was radically at odds with many of his contemporaries and opposed their nation-building and modernization projects. Through his literary and aesthetic practice as an essayist, Zhou espoused a way of constructing the individual and affirming the individual's importance in opposition to the normative national subject of most May Fourth reformers. Zhou's work presents an alternative vision of the nation and questions the monolithic claims of modernity by promoting traditional aesthetic categories, the locality rather than the nation, and a literary history that values openness and individualism.

Author Biography

Susan Daruvala is University Lecturer in Chinese at the University of Cambridge and fellow of Trinity College.

Table of Contents

Modernity and the Rupture with the Past
1(59)
Nationalism and Modernity
14(21)
Lu Xun: The Paradigmatic May Fourth Intellectual
35(5)
Zhou Zuoren's Alternative Response to Modernity
40(13)
The Break with the May Fourth Discourse and Afterwards
53(6)
Constructions of Culture
59(54)
Archaism and Revolution: The Legacy of Zhang Binglin
65(9)
Two Ways of Seeing Time and Culture: Lu Xun and Zhou Zuoren
74(10)
Anthropology, Mythology, and the Affective Life of the People
84(6)
Japanese Constructions of Place
90(6)
The Presence of the Past
96(8)
Culture and Collaboration
104(9)
The Aesthetics of Place and Self
113(56)
Literature and the Ineffable
120(12)
Archaism and the Late Ming Counter-tradition
132(6)
Quwei as a Poetics of Locality and Material Culture
138(14)
Bense: Individual Integrity and the Relation to the Tradition
152(17)
Zhou Zuoren's Humanism, the Self, and the Essay Form
169(49)
The Debate over the Essay
169(27)
Zhou's Anti-Exceptionalism
196(6)
``Confucian Intentionality and Western Knowledge''
202(11)
Competing Models of Selhood
213(5)
The Construction of the Nation
218(45)
People, Language, Class, Locality
228(8)
Time and the Aesthetics of Ear and Eye
236(8)
Conclusion
244(19)
Notes 263(50)
Works Cited 313(22)
Character List 335(10)
Index 345

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