- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Illustrations
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
-
Introduction “Manchukuo Perspectives,” or “Collaboration” as a Transcendence of Literary, National, and Chronological Boundaries -
1 Unpacking “New Manchuria” Narratives -
2 Fairy Tales and the Creation of the “Future Nation” of Manchukuo -
3 Spiritual Resistance -
4 Utopianism Unrealized -
5 Linguistic Hybridity, Transnational Connectivity, and the Cultural Territorialization of Colonial Literature -
6 Sickness, Death, and Survival in the Works of Gu Ding and Xiao Hong -
7 Manchukuo Melancholy -
8 Zhu Ti and I -
9 From Radical Nationalism to Anti-modernism -
10 Literature Selection in a Historical Dilemma -
11 Acculturation and Border-Crossing in Manchukuo Literature -
12 Searching for Memories of Colonial Literature in Modern History -
13 Luo Tuosheng and Manchukuo Literature -
14 In the Sunken Submarine -
15 The Imagination of Heterogeneous Space and Implicit Transformations of Identity -
16 The Literary Politics of Harmonization and Dissonance -
17 “Manchuria” and the Proletarian Literature of Colonial Korea -
18 Modern Korean Literature and Manchukuo - Postscript
- Contributors
- Index
Zhu Ti and I
Zhu Ti and I
- Chapter:
- (p.134) 8 Zhu Ti and I
- Source:
- Manchukuo Perspectives
- Author(s):
Ke Ju
Li Zhengzhong
, Norman Smith- Publisher:
- Hong Kong University Press
In this chapter, Li Zhengzhong (pen name Ke Ju) (b. 1921) provides a heart-felt remembrance of his wife, writer Zhang Xingjuan (penname Zhu Ti) (1923-2012), her career, and their lives together. Married for over sixty years, they comprise one couple of the “Northeast’s four famous husband-wife writers.” Li is one of the last surviving Manchukuo-based Chinese writers and editors.
Keywords: Manchukuo, Li Zhengzhong, Ke Ju, Zhang Xingjuan, Zhu Ti, Japanese occupation, Chinese writers, memoir
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Illustrations
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
-
Introduction “Manchukuo Perspectives,” or “Collaboration” as a Transcendence of Literary, National, and Chronological Boundaries -
1 Unpacking “New Manchuria” Narratives -
2 Fairy Tales and the Creation of the “Future Nation” of Manchukuo -
3 Spiritual Resistance -
4 Utopianism Unrealized -
5 Linguistic Hybridity, Transnational Connectivity, and the Cultural Territorialization of Colonial Literature -
6 Sickness, Death, and Survival in the Works of Gu Ding and Xiao Hong -
7 Manchukuo Melancholy -
8 Zhu Ti and I -
9 From Radical Nationalism to Anti-modernism -
10 Literature Selection in a Historical Dilemma -
11 Acculturation and Border-Crossing in Manchukuo Literature -
12 Searching for Memories of Colonial Literature in Modern History -
13 Luo Tuosheng and Manchukuo Literature -
14 In the Sunken Submarine -
15 The Imagination of Heterogeneous Space and Implicit Transformations of Identity -
16 The Literary Politics of Harmonization and Dissonance -
17 “Manchuria” and the Proletarian Literature of Colonial Korea -
18 Modern Korean Literature and Manchukuo - Postscript
- Contributors
- Index