
Contents
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From Shuqing to the Lyrical: A Critical Genealogy From Shuqing to the Lyrical: A Critical Genealogy
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Inventing the “Lyrical Tradition”: Chen Shih-hsiang Inventing the “Lyrical Tradition”: Chen Shih-hsiang
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Archaeology of Feeling: Shen Congwen Archaeology of Feeling: Shen Congwen
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“The Lyrical” and “the Epic”: Jaroslav Průšek “The Lyrical” and “the Epic”: Jaroslav Průšek
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Introduction: Inventing the “Lyrical Tradition”
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Published:January 2015
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Abstract
This introduction argues that we need to develop a discourse that can truly speak to the complex trajectories of modern Chinese affections and sensibilities vis-à-vis a tumultuous time. It suggests that, beyond the extant scholarship on the modern Chinese reception of Western lyricism, an inquiry into shuqing can provide a new prism through which to develop such a discourse. It highlights the interplay between classical Chinese poetics and modern theories, pointing to a conspicuous lacuna in current modern Chinese literary and cultural studies. It focuses on three figures who each presented a lyrical theory in response to the mid-twentieth-century crisis in China: Chen Shih-hsiang in the United States, Shen Congwen in China, and Jaroslav Prüšek in Czechoslovakia.
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