Meng Yue is assistant professor of East Asian languages and literature at the University of California, Irvine.
Even before the romanticized golden era of Shanghai in the 1930s, the famed Asian city was remarkable for its uniqueness and East-meets-West cosmopolitanism. Meng Yue analyzes a century-long shift of urbanity from China’s heartland to its shore. During the period between the decline of Jiangnan cities such as Suzhou and Yangzhou and Shanghai’s early twentieth-century rise, the overlapping cultural edges of a failing Chinese royal order and the encroachment of Western imperialists converged. Simultaneously appropriating and resisting imposing forces, Shanghai opened itself to unruly, subversive practices, becoming a crucible of creativity and modernism.
Calling into question conventional ways of conceptualizing modernity, colonialism, and intercultural relations, Meng Yue examines such cultural practices as the work of the commercial press, street theater, and literary arts, and shows that what appear to be minor cultural changes often signal the presence of larger political and economic developments. Engaging theories of modernity and postcolonial and global cultural studies, Meng Yue reveals the paradoxical interdependence between imperial and imperialist histories and the retranslation of culture that characterized the most notable result of China’s urban relocation—the emergence of the international city of Shanghai.
發表於2024-12-22
Shanghai and the Edges of Empires 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
圖書標籤: 上海 海外中國研究 曆史 孟悅 文學/文化批評 cosmopolitanism Shanghai 近代史
de-emphasize the western impact- china respond mode
評分似乎眼光高於能力
評分看瞭開頭想給4星,都看完瞭覺得3星就行瞭
評分似乎眼光高於能力
評分草草度過,印象不深,主要是與空間的關係不如我願。
Shanghai and the Edges of Empires 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載