The Columbia Companion to modern East Asian literature /
This extraordinary one-volume guide to the modern literatures of China, Japan, and Korea is the definitive reference work on the subject in the English language. With more than one hundred articles that show how a host of authors and literary movements have contributed to the general literary develo...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York :
Columbia University Press,
©2003.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- PART I General Introduction: JOSHUA S. MOSTOW, GENERAL EDITOR; 1. The Columbia companion to modern East Asian literature; 2. Modern literature in East Asia: an overview; PART II Japan: SHARALYN ORBAUGH, ASSOCIATE EDITOR; Thematic Essays; 3. Historical overview; 4. The problem of the modern subject; 5. Nation and nationalism; 6. Gender, family, and sexualities in modern literature; 7. The social organization of modern Japanese literature; Authors, Works, Schools; 8. Translated and political novels of the Meiji period; 9. Tsubouchi Shoyo and Futabatei Shimei.
- 10. The Ken'yusha, Ozaki Koyo, and Yamada Bimyo11. Meiji women writers; 12. Moriogai; 13. Higuchi Ichiyo and neoclassical modernism; 14. Shimazaki Toson; 15. Natsume Soseki; 16. Seito and the resurgence of writing by women; 17. The revival of poetry in traditional forms; 18. Poetry in Chinese in the modern period; 19. Meiji-period theater; 20. Uno Chiyo; 21. Tanizaki Jun'ichiro; 22. Shiga Naoya and the Shirakaba group; 23. Akutagawa Ryunosuke; 24. The debate over pure literature; 25. Naturalism and the emergence of the Shishosetsu (personal novel); 26. Kawabata Yasunari.
- 27. Free verse in the Taishoera28. Takamura Kotaro; 29. Taisho and prewar Showa theater; 30. Hayashi Fumiko; 31. Miyamoto Yuriko and socialist writers; 32. Nagai Kafu; 33. Wartime fiction; 34. Atomic fiction and poetry; 35. Occupation-period fiction; 36. Dazai Osamu, Sakaguchi Ango, and the Burai school; 37. Abe Kobo; 38. Oe Kenzaburo; 39. Ibuse Masuji; 40. Endo Shusaku; 41. Enchi Fumiko; 42. Mishima Yukio; 43. The 1960s and 1970s boom in women's writing; 44. Oba Minako; 45. Murakami Ryu; 46. Murakami Haruki; 47. Nakagami Kenji; 48. Kanai Mieko; 49. Tsushima Yuko.
- 50. Shimada Masahiko and Shimizu Yoshinori51. Yoshimoto Banana; 52. Yamada Eimi; 53. Postwar poetry; 54. Postwar experimental theater I: Angura; 55. Postwar experimental theater II: Buto and performance art; 56. Modern Okinawan literature; PART III China: KIRK A. DENTON, ASSOCIATE EDITOR; Thematic Essays; 57. Historical overview; 58. Language and literary form; 59. Literary communities and the production of literature; 60. Modern Chinese literature as an institution: canon and literary history; Authors, Works, Schools.
- 61. The late Qing poetry revolution: Liang Qichao, Huang Zunxian, and Chinese literary modernity62. The uses of fiction: Liang Qichao and his contemporaries; 63. Late Qing fiction; 64. Zhou Shoujuan's love stories and mandarin ducks and butterflies fiction; 65. Form and reform: New poetry and the crescent moon society; 66. Reconsidering the origins of modern Chinese women's writing; 67. Romantic sentiment and the problem of the subject: Yu Dafu; 68. The madman that was Ah Q: tradition and modernity in Lu Xun's fiction; 69. Feminism and revolution: The work and life of Ding Ling.