
Published online:
26 September 2013
Published in print:
27 March 2013
Online ISBN:
9780804785594
Print ISBN:
9780804754255
Contents
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A Grieving Son A Grieving Son
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A Book of Fragments A Book of Fragments
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A Self Composed in Grief A Self Composed in Grief
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Disorder and Order Disorder and Order
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Portraits of a Lost Mother Portraits of a Lost Mother
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Mortal Remains Mortal Remains
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Lingering Spirits Lingering Spirits
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Out of Experience Out of Experience
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Pondering Pain Pondering Pain
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Cite
Meyer-Fong, Tobie, 'Loss', What Remains: Coming to Terms with Civil War in 19th Century China (Redwood City, CA , 2013; online edn, Stanford Scholarship Online, 26 Sept. 2013), https://doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9780804754255.003.0006, accessed 18 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter highlights one man’s efforts to honor his deceased mother in writing. As a boy of eight, Zhang Guanglie witnessed his mother’s murder during the Taiping occupation of Hangzhou in 1861. In his “Record of 1861,” he both uses and challenges the conventions used in official commemoration for the war dead. His idiosyncratic and fragmentary book documents his deeply personal search for consolation. The chapter also deals with the role of publishing and newspapers as a medium for the formation of new types of post-war community.
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