Lu Xun and World Literature by Xiaolu Ma and Carlos Rojas (Hong Kong University Press) continues the trend to incorporating Chinese contemporary literature into global modernism (as per Anne Witchard’s Lao She in London)….
In Lu Xun and World Literature, Xiaolu Ma, Carlos Rojas, and other contributors examine various aspects of Lu Xun, who is known as the father of modern Chinese literature. Essays in this book focus on Lu Xun’s works in relation to the notions of world literature and processes of literary worlding. The contributors offer detailed analyses of Lu Xun’s own literary oeuvre and of foreign works that engage with his writings. This volume also focuses on many facets of the publication and dissemination of Lu Xun’s works’, from printing and binding to the discussions and debates that followed their release in China and abroad. This book not only makes an important contribution to the field of Lu Xun studies, but also proposes a reexamination of the category of world literature.
Xiaolu Ma is assistant professor of humanities at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.
Carlos Rojas is professor of Chinese cultural studies and gender, sexuality, and feminist studies at Duke University.
Wallis arrived in China in 1924, right in time to pick up the new Thomas Cook’s guide published that year. Their Peking office was in the lobby of the Grand Hotel de Pekin where she was staying.
Arthur Vale Casselman’s 1953 It Happened in Hunan was published by the Board of International Missions, Evangelical and Reformed Church (Philadelphia). I think it’s about the 1920 famine raged throughout Hunan and killed an estimated two million Hunanese. Riots occurred and several missionaries were murdered. Casselman’s life revolved round the Huping Christian College Campus of the missionary-founded Lakeside College, near Yochow (now Yueyang). But I don’t know much about this so if anyone knows the book, or Casselman, better let me know?
From Bamber Gascoigne’s (yes, Brits of a certain age will know him from University Challenge – “your starter for ten…”) The Treasures and Dynasties of China (Jonathan Cape, 1973) – so he wasn’t as infallible as he appeared on TV back then!
After leaving it occupied only by the last Tsarist ambassador Prince Nikolai Kudashev for years the new Soviet Union occupied their Peking Legation (the compound opposite the US Legation) in 1923, sent veteran Bolshevik Lev Karakhan as ambassador, & ran up the red flag….
Following on from my post about Wallis staying at the Palace Hotel on the Shanghai Bund in autumn 1924 the phenomenal Old Shanghai picture researcher (& newly minted Old Shanghai Phd) Katya Knyazeva sent me this gem from 1924 reminding me that the trams ran right outside along the Bund and that, already, it seems the plot to the north of the Palace, across Nanjing Rd, was cleared and would eventually be Victor Sassoon’s Cathay Hotel in 1929….