1st Edition

Politics and Literature in Mongolia (1921-1948)

By Simon Wickhamsmith Copyright 2020
356 Pages
by Routledge

356 Pages
by Routledge

356 Pages
by Routledge

Politics and Literature in Mongolia (1921-1948) investigates the relationship between literature and politics during Mongolia's early revolutionary period. Between the 1921 socialist revolution and the first Writers' Congress held in April 1948, the literary community constituted a key resource in the formation and implementation of policy. At the same time, debates within the party, discontent... Read more
Transliteration and Mongolian Names, Introduction, Chapter One: Prefiguring 1921, Chapter Two: Staging a Revolution, Chapter Three: Landscape Re-envisioned, Chapter Four: Leftward Together, Chapter Five: Society in Flux, Chapter Six: Negotiating Faith, Chapter Seven: Life and its Value, Chapter Eight: The Great Opportunistic Repression, Chapter Nine: A Closer Union, Appendix: Brief Biographies of Writers, Index

Biography

Simon Wickhamsmith is a scholar and translator of modern Mongolian literature. He teaches in the Writing Program and the Department of Asian Languages and Cultures at Rutgers University. Franck Billé is a cultural anthropologist based at the University of California, Berkeley, where he is program director for the Tang Center for Silk Road Studies. He is the author of Sinophobia (Hawaii, 2015), coauthor of On the Edge (Harvard, 2021), editor of Voluminous States (Duke, 2020), and coeditor of Yellow Perils (Hawaii, 2019) and Frontier Encounters (Open Book, 2012). He is currently finalizing his latest book, Somatic States: On Cartography, Geobodies, Bodily Integrity (Duke University Press). More information about his current research is available on his website: www.franckbille.com.
Professor Caroline Humphrey is an anthropologist who has worked across Asia and countries of the former Soviet Union. She is currently based at the Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit at Cambridge, which she co-founded, and she is a Director of Research at the Department of Social Anthropology. She has been a Fellow of King's since 1978.