Mapping Modern Beijing Hardcover Book: Space, Emotion, Literary Topography

Mapping Modern Beijing: Space, Emotion, Literary Topography is a hardcover book offered in Like New condition. It is suitable for readers interested in modern Beijing studies, literary geography, and how space and emotion shape urban narratives. Free Shipping is included with this item. Check the listing for details on edition, publication information, and any included extras such as dust jacket or supplementary materials.

USD 105.75
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Mapping Modern Beijing Hardcover Book: Space, Emotion, Literary Topography Specs
Book TitleMapping Modern Beijing : Space, Emotion, Literary Topography
ISBN9780190200671
Subject AreaLiterary Criticism
Publication NameMapping Modern Beijing : Space, Emotion, Literary Topography
PublisherOxford University Press, Incorporated
Item Length6.4 in
SubjectAsian / Chinese, General
Publication Year2017
TypeTextbook
FormatHardcover
LanguageEnglish
Item Height1.1 in
AuthorWeijie Song
Item Weight20 Oz
Item Width9.4 in
Number of Pages264 Pages
Listing details

Mapping Modern Beijing : Space, Emotion, Literary Topography, Hardcover by Song, Weijie, ISBN 0190200677, ISBN-13 9780190200671, Like New Used, Free shipping in the US<em>Mapping Modern Beijing</em> investigates the five methods of representing Beijing-a warped hometown, a city of snapshots and manners, an aesthetic city, an imperial capital in comparative and cross-cultural perspective, and a displaced city on the Sinophone and diasporic postmemory-by authors<br>travelling across mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and overseas Sinophone and non-Chinese communities. <br><br>The metamorphosis of Beijing's everyday spaces and the structural transformation of private and public emotions unfold Manchu writer Lao She's Beijing complex about a warped native city. Zhang Henshui's popular snapshots of fleeting shocks and everlasting sorrows illustrate his affective mapping of<br>urban transition and human manners in Republican Beijing. Female poet and architect Lin Huiyin captures an aesthetic and picturesque city vis-à-vis the political and ideological urban planning. The imagined imperial capital constructed in bilingual, transcultural, and comparative works by Lin<br>Yutang, Princess Der Ling, and Victor Segalen highlights the pleasures and pitfalls of collecting local knowledge and presenting Orientalist and Cosmopolitan visions. In the shadow of World Wars and Cold War, a multilayered displaced Beijing appears in the Sinophone postmemory by diasporic Beijing<br>native Liang Shiqiu, Taiwan sojourners Zhong Lihe and Lin Haiyin, and émigré martial arts novelist Jin Yong in Hong Kong. Weijie Song situates Beijing in a larger context of modern Chinese-language urban imaginations, and charts the emotional topography of the city against the backdrop of the<br>downfall of the Manchu Empire, the rise of modern nation-state, the 1949 great divide, and the formation of Cold War and globalizing world.<br><br>Drawing from literary canons to exotic narratives, from modernist poetry to chivalric fantasy, from popular culture to urban planning, Song explores the complex nexus of urban spaces, archives of emotions, and literary topography of Beijing in its long journey from imperial capital to Republican<br>city and to socialist metropolis.<br>