Course Code and Course Title
[CHES2105/CCSS2030] Modern Chinese Literature
Time and Venue
Tue 10:30am - 1:15pm
YIA_505
Instructor
Course Description
Critical changes in literature and culture took place across the twentieth century in China. These changes were in response to the self-strengthening demands of young revolutionaries after decades of war and national humiliation. Over several decades, Chinese writers experimented with Western literary genres, including realism, romanticism, imagism, modernism, critical realism, magical realism, postmodernism, and so on. Chinese writers constantly probed the issue of literary modernity and attempted to redefine China and Chineseness by incorporating Western influences into classical Chinese aesthetics.
This class explores Chinese literary tradition in the twentieth century and early twenty first century through fiction (novels, short stories, poetry, etc.) and films from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Mainland China. Major themes we will discuss include socio-political reformation, gender relations, urban space, the environment, and individual subjectivity. Creatively engaging with Western influences and classical literary traditions, Chinese writers and filmmakers we examine showcase how the Chinese reconstructed modern literature in relation to China’s nation-building process. All readings are available in English translations of Chinese originals.
Course Outline
Course Overview & The Origins of Modern Chinese Literature
May Fourth Movement: Literature and the Nation
May Fourth Movement and the Salvation of Women
New Women on Screen
Iconoclasts of Modern China
Mid-term Literary Analysis Exam
The Lyrical Tradition of Modern Chinese Literature
New Sensationism and the Rise of Urban Centers
Constructing the New Woman
Women’s Writing and the Quotidian
The Beginning of the New Era and Root-Seeking Literature
Imagining the Post-human: From Science Fantasy to Science Fiction