- 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
Postscript
Postscript
- Chapter:
- (p.294) Postscript
- Source:
- Manchukuo Perspectives
- Author(s):
Norman Smith
- Publisher:
- Hong Kong University Press
The postscript examines the afterlife of Manchukuo literature and the effects of current Chinese government support, as well as attempted censorship, of the field. It provides an important argument for the value of the field to a deeper understanding of cultural production under the Japanese-occupied Manchukuo regime, and why this matters today.
Keywords: Manchukuo literature, censorship, archival study in China, transnational scholarship
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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