In this essay I engage with Fredric Jameson's theoretical works and ideas, especially his concept of national allegory, and examine their possibilities and limits for use in literary analysis of Modem Chinese Literat...In this essay I engage with Fredric Jameson's theoretical works and ideas, especially his concept of national allegory, and examine their possibilities and limits for use in literary analysis of Modem Chinese Literature. In particular, I examine the themes of the nation and the passage of time in the works of Yu Dafu, Lao She, Xiao Hong, and Zhao Shuli and argue for evidence of a historical development from cyclical narrative to messianic and utopian linear time in their novels. While Yu Dafu's "Sinking" (Chenlun) and Lao She's Camel Xiangzi (Luotuo Xiangzi) both display a desire to break free from cyclical time and narration, the narratives fold back into themselves. In contrast, Xiao Hong's The Field of Life and Death (Shengsi chang) mediates between two different temporal schemes and marks a transition to the linear developments prevalent in Socialist Realist novels such as Zhao Shuli's Sanliwan Village (Sanliwan). While Jameson's earlier works on Realism, Marxism, and the "Political Unconscious" all provide valuable insight into Modem Chinese Literature and the novels mentioned, Jameson's engagement with Chinese authors has also opened up new ways of examining Chinese literature.展开更多
This essay analyzes the phenomenon of clandestine graves of missing persons in Mexico as a social,political,and philosophical problem,where theological clues are established.With the contributions of decolonial though...This essay analyzes the phenomenon of clandestine graves of missing persons in Mexico as a social,political,and philosophical problem,where theological clues are established.With the contributions of decolonial thought this reflection seeks to think the absence and,within it,to think the emergence of an alternative world promoted by the just people of history with the resistances they create to live the present with dignity and hope.展开更多
文摘In this essay I engage with Fredric Jameson's theoretical works and ideas, especially his concept of national allegory, and examine their possibilities and limits for use in literary analysis of Modem Chinese Literature. In particular, I examine the themes of the nation and the passage of time in the works of Yu Dafu, Lao She, Xiao Hong, and Zhao Shuli and argue for evidence of a historical development from cyclical narrative to messianic and utopian linear time in their novels. While Yu Dafu's "Sinking" (Chenlun) and Lao She's Camel Xiangzi (Luotuo Xiangzi) both display a desire to break free from cyclical time and narration, the narratives fold back into themselves. In contrast, Xiao Hong's The Field of Life and Death (Shengsi chang) mediates between two different temporal schemes and marks a transition to the linear developments prevalent in Socialist Realist novels such as Zhao Shuli's Sanliwan Village (Sanliwan). While Jameson's earlier works on Realism, Marxism, and the "Political Unconscious" all provide valuable insight into Modem Chinese Literature and the novels mentioned, Jameson's engagement with Chinese authors has also opened up new ways of examining Chinese literature.
文摘This essay analyzes the phenomenon of clandestine graves of missing persons in Mexico as a social,political,and philosophical problem,where theological clues are established.With the contributions of decolonial thought this reflection seeks to think the absence and,within it,to think the emergence of an alternative world promoted by the just people of history with the resistances they create to live the present with dignity and hope.