In 1992 Deng Xiaoping famously declared, “Development is the only
hard imperative.” What ensued was the transformation of China from a
socialist state to a capitalist market economy. The spirit of
development has since become the prevailing creed of the People’s
Republic, helping to bring about unprecedented modern prosperity, but
also creating new forms of poverty, staggering social upheaval,
physical dislocation, and environmental destruction. In Developmental
Fairy Tales, Andrew F. Jones asserts that the groundwork for this
recent transformation was laid in the late nineteenth century, with
the translation of the evolutionary works of Lamarck, Darwin, and
Spencer into Chinese letters. He traces the ways that the evolutionary
narrative itself evolved into a form of vernacular knowledge which
dissolved the boundaries between beast and man and reframed childhood
development as a recapitulation of civilizational ascent, through
which a beleaguered China might struggle for existence and claim a
place in the modern world-system. This narrative left an indelible
imprint on China’s literature and popular media, from children’s
primers to print culture, from fairy tales to filmmaking. Jones’s
analysis offers an innovative and interdisciplinary angle of vision on
China’s cultural evolution. He focuses especially on China’s
foremost modern writer and public intellectual, Lu Xun, in whose work
the fierce contradictions of his generation’s developmentalist
aspirations became the stuff of pedagogical parable. Developmental
Fairy Tales revises our understanding of literature’s role in the
making of modern China by revising our understanding of
developmentalism’s role in modern Chinese literature.
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Evolutionary Thinking and Modern Chinese Culture
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674061033
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter