[04/02/2021] Decadence in Modern Chinese Literature and Culture

Friday, April 2nd, 2021

3:00pm – 4:00pm ET 

Livestream via ZOOM

About the Event

Decadence in Modern Chinese Literature and Culture is the first monograph that comprehensively studies Decadence in Chinese literature since the 1920s. It uses the original notions of late nineteenth- century European Decadence as a critical lens to re-examine twentieth-century Chinese literature and to illuminate the changing status of China’s modern cultural elite. Ever since its introduction to China in the early 1920s, Decadence, or its Chinese translation “tuifei,” has been associated with a pessimistic worldview and an indulgence in physical pleasures, which has led to often simplistic and moralistic criticism. In contrast, European Decadents rebelled against the norms they believed in to brandish their free will and spiritual superiority because they were anxious about their loss of cultural and moral authority to the rising middle class. By examining seven prominent Chinese writers from different generations, this book demonstrates that it was not until the late 1980s and 1990s that Decadent literature in the original European sense emerged in China. This is because China’s modern cultural elite did not feel the real decline in their cultural and moral authority until then, when the socialist system, after fostering a strong sense of elitism in them, withdrew its ideological endorsement and material support. As a result, they turned to Decadent rebellion to reclaim their spiritual superiority yet in vain because of its internal and external paradoxes.

This event is co-sponsored by the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures and the East Asia National Resource Center at the George Washington University.

Speaker

Hongjian Wang

Assistant Professor of Chinese and Asian Studies, Purdue University

Author

Hongjian Wang

Hongjian Wang is an Assistant Professor in Chinese at Purdue University. She received her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature in 2012 from the University of California, Riverside, and her B.A. in English Language and Literature in 2006 from Nanjing University (China). Prior to her position at Purdue, she was an Assistant Professor of Chinese at the University of Arkansas.

Dr. Wang’s research interests cover modern and contemporary Chinese literature, film, theater and cultural history. She has published an article on the photographic representation of modern Chinese masculinity in an anthology on the popular pictorial Liangyou in the Republican era. In addition to her manuscript on Decadence in twentieth-century Chinese literature, she is also working on three new projects, namely, Chinese independent documentary films, contemporary Chinese experimental theater, and the satirical skits in China’s national gala on TV during the Spring Festival.

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