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Socialist Cosmopolitanism" offers an innovative interpretation of literature from the Mao era, proposing to read Chinese socialist literature as world literature. China after 1949 engaged with the world beyond its borders in myriad ways and on many levels-political and economic, cultural as well as literary. Far from rejecting the worldliness of earlier eras, Nicolai Volland demonstrates, the young People's Republic developed its own cosmopolitanism. Rather than a radical break with the past, Chinese socialist literature should be seen as an integral and important chapter of China's long search to find a place within world literature. Socialist Cosmopolitanism revisits a range of genres, from poetry and land reform novels to science fiction and children's literature, and shows how Chinese writers and readers alike saw their own literary production as part of a much larger literary universe. This literary space, reaching from Beijing to Berlin, from Prague to Pyongyang, from Warsaw to Moscow to Hanoi, allowed authors and texts to travel, in the course reinventing the meaning of world literature. Chinese socialist literature is driven by a hugely ambitious-and ultimately doomed-attempt to redraw the literary world map.
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1
Socialist Cosmopolitanism: The Chinese Literary Universe, 1945-1965
2020, Columbia University Press
in English
0231183119 9780231183116
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2
Socialist Cosmopolitanism: The Chinese Literary Universe, 1945-1965
Mar 28, 2017, Columbia University Press
hardcover
in English
0231183100 9780231183109
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3
Socialist Cosmopolitanism: The Chinese Literary Universe, 1945-1965
2017, Columbia University Press
in English
0231544758 9780231544757
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Source title: Socialist Cosmopolitanism: The Chinese Literary Universe, 1945-1965 (Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University)

