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More than four decades after its founding, the Journal of Modern Literature remains a leading scholarly journal in the field of modern and contemporary literature and is widely recognized as such. It emphasizes scholarly studies of literature in all languages, as well as related arts and cultural artifacts, from 1900 to the present. International in its scope, its contributors include scholars from Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceana, and South America.

Monday, April 12, 2021

JML 44.2 (Winter 2021) is LIVE!

 


JML 44.2 (Winter 2021) 
"Modern Chinese Literature in the Context of World Literature"
guest edited by Wang Ning and Peng Qinglong
is now live on JSTOR and Project Muse


Content includes:

Wang Ning
Editor’s Introduction: Modern Chinese Literature from Local to Global

Reflections on Theories and Literary Trends


Wang Ning
Transvaluing the New Culture Movement: Toward the Construction of a Cosmo-Humanism

Yang Mingming and Yang Xin
Modern Chinese Literature under the Russian-Soviet Influence

Xiaohong Zhang and Jiazhao Lin
Between Modern and Postmodern: Contemporary Chinese Poetry from Outside in

Chengzhou He
Drama as Political Commentary: Women and the Legacy of the May Fourth Movement in Cao Yu’s Plays

Tong King Lee
Hong Kong Literature: Colonialism, Cosmopolitanism, Consumption 

Interpretations of Writers and Their Works

Ming Dong Gu
Lu Xun and Modern Chinese Literature in the Context of World Literature

Zou Li 
Toward a New Narrative About China’s Anti-Japanese War: Reading Bodily Anxiety in Ba Jin’s Cold Nights

Weihua He
Fortress Besieged: Cynicism and Qian Zhongshu’s Narrative of the Modern Chinese “Self”

Peng Qinglong 
The National and Cosmopolitan Significance of Jia Pingwa’s Fiction

Lu Shao
The Rationale of Realism in Yu Hua’s To Live (1993) 

Afterword

Theo D’haen 
Modern Chinese Literature and World Literature from a European Perspective

Reviews

Feng Dong 
The Unbearable Affects of Being

James Belflower
Emerging Improvisations: A Review of Writing in Real Time | Emergent Poetics from Whitman to the Digital

Catherine Flynn
Modernism at the Bar: Robert Spoo’s Modernism and the Law

Tanfer Emin Tunc 
Rethinking Modernism, Sex and Gender

Patrick Anson
The Work of Art and the Art of Work



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