Detecting Chinese modernities : : rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) / / Yan Wei.

In Detecting Chinese Modernities: Rupture and Continuity in Modern Chinese Detective Fiction (1896–1949) , Yan Wei historicizes the two stages in the development of Chinese detective fiction and discusses the rupture and continuity in the cultural transactions, mediation, and appropriation that occu...

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Superior document:Sinica Leidensia ; Volume 150
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Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill,, [2020]
©2020
Year of Publication:2020
Language:English
Series:Sinica Leidensia ; Volume 150.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
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spelling Wei, Yan, author.
Detecting Chinese modernities : rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) / Yan Wei.
Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2020]
©2020
1 online resource.
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource rdacarrier
Sinica Leidensia ; Volume 150
In Detecting Chinese Modernities: Rupture and Continuity in Modern Chinese Detective Fiction (1896–1949) , Yan Wei historicizes the two stages in the development of Chinese detective fiction and discusses the rupture and continuity in the cultural transactions, mediation, and appropriation that occurred when the genre of detective fiction traveled to China during the first half of the twentieth century. Wei identifies two divergent, or even opposite strategies for appropriating Western detective fiction during the late Qing and the Republican periods. She further argues that these two periods in the domestication of detective fiction were also connected by shared emotions. Both periods expressed ambivalent and sometimes contradictory views regarding Chinese tradition and Western modernity.
Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 A Brief History of Modern Detective Fiction in China -- 2 Global Form and Local Expressions: Alternative Modernities in Modern Chinese Detective Fiction -- 3 Overview -- Part 1: The Formative Stage: Chinese Detective Fiction during the Late Qing Period -- 1 Meeting Detective Fiction: Western Detective Fiction in Chinese Translation -- 1 The Spirit of Chivalric Vengeance: Lin Shu’s Translation of A Study in Scarlet -- 2 New Civilizations and Old Morals: Zhou Guisheng, Wu Jianren, and The Serpents’ Coils -- 3 Quwei: Zhou Zuoren and “The Gold-Bug” -- 2 The Detective Story in Traditional Clothes: the Embryonic Form of Native Chinese Detective Fiction -- 1 Sherlock Holmes and the “Quickening Incense”: the Poisoning Case in The Travels of Lao Can -- 2 To Be a Detective or a Cruel Judge: Judge Lu’s Dilemma in The Shining Light in the Sea of Aggrieved Cases -- 3 An Alternative View of Chinese Detective Fiction: the zhiguai Tale “The Shouzhen” in Chinese Detective Cases -- 4 The New Woman and the New Fiction: Lü Simian’s Chinese Female Detectives -- Part 2: The Golden Age: Chinese Detective Fiction in the Republican Period -- 3 “Disguised Textbooks for Science”: Detective Fiction as a Pedagogical Tool -- 1 Chinese Detective Writers and the Community of Scientific Discourse -- 2 Three Aspects of Scientific Discourse in Republican Detective Fiction -- 4 Justice and the Chivalric Detective -- 1 Private Detective Huo Sang and Mozi’s Ideas of jian’ai and youxia -- 2 Burglar-Detective Lu Ping and the Philosophy of Thieves in Zhuangzi -- 5 Shanghai Modern: the Metropolitan Landscape in Chinese Detective Fiction -- 1 Shanghai Cosmopolitanism and Republican Detective Fiction Writers -- 2 Redrawing the Spectacle of Shanghai Modernity -- 3 The Transnational Imagination of Republican Detective Fiction -- 6 Domestic Crimes in Everyday Life -- 1 Local Clues from Daily Life -- 2 Family Crimes during the Transitional Period -- 3 Shanghai Alleyways in Cheng Xiaoqing’s Huo Sang Detective Stories -- Conclusion: the Legacies of the Late Qing Mode and the Republican Mode: Echoes and Variations after 1949 -- 1 The Republican Mode and the Detective Fiction of Postwar Hong Kong -- 2 The Late Qing Mode and Robert van Gulik’s Judge Dee Series -- Character List -- Works Cited -- Index.
Description based on print version record.
Detective and mystery stories, Chinese History and criticism.
Chinese fiction 20th century History and criticism.
90-04-43127-6
Sinica Leidensia ; Volume 150.
language English
format eBook
author Wei, Yan,
spellingShingle Wei, Yan,
Detecting Chinese modernities : rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) /
Sinica Leidensia ;
Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 A Brief History of Modern Detective Fiction in China -- 2 Global Form and Local Expressions: Alternative Modernities in Modern Chinese Detective Fiction -- 3 Overview -- Part 1: The Formative Stage: Chinese Detective Fiction during the Late Qing Period -- 1 Meeting Detective Fiction: Western Detective Fiction in Chinese Translation -- 1 The Spirit of Chivalric Vengeance: Lin Shu’s Translation of A Study in Scarlet -- 2 New Civilizations and Old Morals: Zhou Guisheng, Wu Jianren, and The Serpents’ Coils -- 3 Quwei: Zhou Zuoren and “The Gold-Bug” -- 2 The Detective Story in Traditional Clothes: the Embryonic Form of Native Chinese Detective Fiction -- 1 Sherlock Holmes and the “Quickening Incense”: the Poisoning Case in The Travels of Lao Can -- 2 To Be a Detective or a Cruel Judge: Judge Lu’s Dilemma in The Shining Light in the Sea of Aggrieved Cases -- 3 An Alternative View of Chinese Detective Fiction: the zhiguai Tale “The Shouzhen” in Chinese Detective Cases -- 4 The New Woman and the New Fiction: Lü Simian’s Chinese Female Detectives -- Part 2: The Golden Age: Chinese Detective Fiction in the Republican Period -- 3 “Disguised Textbooks for Science”: Detective Fiction as a Pedagogical Tool -- 1 Chinese Detective Writers and the Community of Scientific Discourse -- 2 Three Aspects of Scientific Discourse in Republican Detective Fiction -- 4 Justice and the Chivalric Detective -- 1 Private Detective Huo Sang and Mozi’s Ideas of jian’ai and youxia -- 2 Burglar-Detective Lu Ping and the Philosophy of Thieves in Zhuangzi -- 5 Shanghai Modern: the Metropolitan Landscape in Chinese Detective Fiction -- 1 Shanghai Cosmopolitanism and Republican Detective Fiction Writers -- 2 Redrawing the Spectacle of Shanghai Modernity -- 3 The Transnational Imagination of Republican Detective Fiction -- 6 Domestic Crimes in Everyday Life -- 1 Local Clues from Daily Life -- 2 Family Crimes during the Transitional Period -- 3 Shanghai Alleyways in Cheng Xiaoqing’s Huo Sang Detective Stories -- Conclusion: the Legacies of the Late Qing Mode and the Republican Mode: Echoes and Variations after 1949 -- 1 The Republican Mode and the Detective Fiction of Postwar Hong Kong -- 2 The Late Qing Mode and Robert van Gulik’s Judge Dee Series -- Character List -- Works Cited -- Index.
author_facet Wei, Yan,
author_variant y w yw
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Wei, Yan,
title Detecting Chinese modernities : rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) /
title_sub rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) /
title_full Detecting Chinese modernities : rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) / Yan Wei.
title_fullStr Detecting Chinese modernities : rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) / Yan Wei.
title_full_unstemmed Detecting Chinese modernities : rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) / Yan Wei.
title_auth Detecting Chinese modernities : rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) /
title_new Detecting Chinese modernities :
title_sort detecting chinese modernities : rupture and continuity in modern chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) /
series Sinica Leidensia ;
series2 Sinica Leidensia ;
publisher Brill,
publishDate 2020
physical 1 online resource.
contents Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 A Brief History of Modern Detective Fiction in China -- 2 Global Form and Local Expressions: Alternative Modernities in Modern Chinese Detective Fiction -- 3 Overview -- Part 1: The Formative Stage: Chinese Detective Fiction during the Late Qing Period -- 1 Meeting Detective Fiction: Western Detective Fiction in Chinese Translation -- 1 The Spirit of Chivalric Vengeance: Lin Shu’s Translation of A Study in Scarlet -- 2 New Civilizations and Old Morals: Zhou Guisheng, Wu Jianren, and The Serpents’ Coils -- 3 Quwei: Zhou Zuoren and “The Gold-Bug” -- 2 The Detective Story in Traditional Clothes: the Embryonic Form of Native Chinese Detective Fiction -- 1 Sherlock Holmes and the “Quickening Incense”: the Poisoning Case in The Travels of Lao Can -- 2 To Be a Detective or a Cruel Judge: Judge Lu’s Dilemma in The Shining Light in the Sea of Aggrieved Cases -- 3 An Alternative View of Chinese Detective Fiction: the zhiguai Tale “The Shouzhen” in Chinese Detective Cases -- 4 The New Woman and the New Fiction: Lü Simian’s Chinese Female Detectives -- Part 2: The Golden Age: Chinese Detective Fiction in the Republican Period -- 3 “Disguised Textbooks for Science”: Detective Fiction as a Pedagogical Tool -- 1 Chinese Detective Writers and the Community of Scientific Discourse -- 2 Three Aspects of Scientific Discourse in Republican Detective Fiction -- 4 Justice and the Chivalric Detective -- 1 Private Detective Huo Sang and Mozi’s Ideas of jian’ai and youxia -- 2 Burglar-Detective Lu Ping and the Philosophy of Thieves in Zhuangzi -- 5 Shanghai Modern: the Metropolitan Landscape in Chinese Detective Fiction -- 1 Shanghai Cosmopolitanism and Republican Detective Fiction Writers -- 2 Redrawing the Spectacle of Shanghai Modernity -- 3 The Transnational Imagination of Republican Detective Fiction -- 6 Domestic Crimes in Everyday Life -- 1 Local Clues from Daily Life -- 2 Family Crimes during the Transitional Period -- 3 Shanghai Alleyways in Cheng Xiaoqing’s Huo Sang Detective Stories -- Conclusion: the Legacies of the Late Qing Mode and the Republican Mode: Echoes and Variations after 1949 -- 1 The Republican Mode and the Detective Fiction of Postwar Hong Kong -- 2 The Late Qing Mode and Robert van Gulik’s Judge Dee Series -- Character List -- Works Cited -- Index.
isbn 90-04-43128-4
90-04-43127-6
callnumber-first P - Language and Literature
callnumber-subject PL - Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania
callnumber-label PL2419
callnumber-sort PL 42419 D48 W45 42020
era_facet 20th century
illustrated Not Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 800 - Literature
dewey-tens 890 - Other literatures
dewey-ones 895 - Literatures of East & Southeast Asia
dewey-full 895.13087209
dewey-sort 3895.13087209
dewey-raw 895.13087209
dewey-search 895.13087209
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hierarchy_parent_title Sinica Leidensia ; Volume 150
hierarchy_sequence Volume 150.
is_hierarchy_title Detecting Chinese modernities : rupture and continuity in modern Chinese detective fiction (1896-1949) /
container_title Sinica Leidensia ; Volume 150
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