1st Edition

Coming of Age in Chinese Literature and Cinema Sinophone Variations of the Bildungsroman

326 Pages
by Routledge

With the inclusion of twelve original articles by established and emerging international scholars, this volume offers critical reading of literary and cinematic texts produced in China and Sinophone communities between the 1950s and 2010s. The articles portray the lineage and mutations of the Chinese Bildungsroman, providing insights into the tensions between individual and society; nation and the... Read more
Acknowledgements, Note on Romanizations and Translations, Introduction, SECTION I: The Global Sixties and Leftist Activism, 1 The Socialist Bildungsroman and Global Youth: Wang Meng and Jack Kerouac Wendy Larson, 2 Growing Up in an Age of Turbulence: The Bildungsromane of Young Hong Kong Writers in the Sixties Mary Shuk-han Wong, 3 Abandoning Iowa's Modernism: Wan Kin-lau Renounces His Bildung in the Cold War Era Mung Ting Chung, SECTION II. Afterlives and Unstable Repositionings, 4 Mapping and Contesting the Notion of Sinophone: The Coming of Age of Global Chinese Literature Sheldon Lu, 5 The Coming of Age of Hong Kong: Dung Kai-cheung's Celestial Creations and the Works of Man: Vividness and Veracity Enoch, Yee-lok Tam, 6 Coming of Age and Learning to Live (with Ghosts) in Borneo's Rainforest Alison M. Groppe, SECTION III. Screening Urban Precarity, 7 Little Pinks, Shamate Kids, and the Involuted Generation: A Coming-of-Age Portrait of China's Post-'90s Generation Kiu-wai Chu, 8 Sentimentality and the Capitalization of Humanity: On Anthony Chen's Ilo Ilo Pheng Cheah, 9 Years of the Yearning Youth: Growth, Flows, and the Dilemma of Maturity in Hong Kong Coming-of-Age Films Fiona Y. W. Law, SECTION IV. The Ecological and the Posthuman, 10 Spectral Mappings: Coming of Age in Su Tong's Shadow of the Hunter Andrea Riemenschnitter, 11 Coming of Age in Post-urban Hong Kong: An Ecocritical Approach to Land-writing and Land-filming Winnie L. M. Yee, 12 Becoming a Cyborg: Female Coming of Age in Chen Qiufan's Waste Tide Hua Li, Complete Bibliography, Index Keywords, Contributors.

Biography

Andrea Riemenschnitter is professor em. of Modern Chinese Language and Literature, University of Zurich. Her most recent book is Sinophone Utopias. Exploring Futures Beyond the China Dream (2023, co-ed.). She has published in Archiv Orientalni, AS, ICCC, Interventions, JMLC, MCLC, Monumenta Serica, etc. Kiu-wai Chu is Assistant Professor in Environmental Humanities and Chinese Studies at Nanyang Technological University. He is a National Humanities Center Fellow 2022-23. His research focuses on environmental humanities, ecocriticism, and contemporary cinema and visual art in China and broader Asia. Mung Ting Chung is Adjunct Associate Professor at the University of Calgary. Her research interests include Hong Kong literature, Sinophone studies, and the cultural Cold War. Her first monograph, Writing Beyond Borders: Hong Kong Literary Production in the Early Cold War Era (tentative title), will be published by Brill.

This volume investigates the Chinese Bildungsroman from the global sixties to the precarious present, and from intensely humanist dreams to dark visions of the end of the Anthropocene. Drawing on an exciting range of literary and cinematic perspectives on what it means to come of age in the Sinosphere, the contributors to this wide-ranging book explore adolescence as both a privately vivid time of life and a potent force for systemic change. —Margaret Hillenbrand, Professor of Modern Chinese Literature and Visual Culture, Oxford University,

A significant contribution to Sinophone and comparative studies, this interdisciplinary volume powerfully illustrates how Bildungsroman and coming-of-age narratives across literature and film confront historical trauma, ideological upheaval, environmental degradation, and global precarity. It offers a compelling reflection on adolescence as a site of resistance, remembrance, and reinvention—shedding new light on the culture and politics of growing up in a fractured, interconnected world. —Weijie Song, Associate Professor in Chinese Literature, Rutgers University.