Lexington Books
Pages: 352
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-1122-2 • Hardback • April 2008 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
978-1-4616-3301-3 • eBook • April 2008 • $139.50 • (£108.00)
Kai-wing Chow is professor of history and East Asian languages and cultures at the University of Illinois. Tze-ki Hon is visiting research fellow at the Modern East Asia Research Centre at Leiden University. Hung-yok Ip is associate professor in the history department at Oregon State University. Don C. Price is professor in the history department at the University of California.
Part 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part One: Commercial Printing and Language Reform
Chapter 3 1. Culture, Capital and the Temptations of the Imagined Market: The Case of the Commercial Press
Chapter 4 2. Canon Formation and Linguistic Turn: Literary Debates in Republican China, 1919-1949
Part 5 Part Two: Gender and Family
Chapter 6 3. The Theory and Practice of Women's Rights in Late Qing Shanghai, 1843-1911
Chapter 7 4. Freeing the Mind through the Body: Women's Thoughts on Physical Education in Late Qing and Early Republican China
Chapter 8 5. Generational and Cultural Fissures in the May Fourth Movement: Wu Yu (1872-1949) and the Politics of Family Reform
Part 9 Part Three: Nation, Science, and Culture
Chapter 10 6. The Politics of Fengjian in Late Qing and Republican China
Chapter 11 7. How Did the Chinese Become Native?: Science and the Search for National Origins in the May Fourth Era
Chapter 12 8. Nationalizing Sound on the Verge of Chinese Modernity
Part 13 Part Four: Modernity and Its Chinese Critics
Chapter 14 9. Buddhism, Literature, and Chinese Modernity: Su Manshu's Imaginings of Love (1911-1916)
Chapter 15 10. From Babbitt to "Bai Bide": Interpretations of New Humanism in Xueheng
Part 16 Epilogue
Chapter 17 11. The Other May Fourth: Twilight of the Old Order
The contents of this volume go beyond the usual range of scholarly assessments and reassessments of May Fourth culture and literature. In widening the horizons of the May Fourth movement and its implications to include such diverse topics as language andprinting, gender and family, as well as the larger issues of science, religion, nation, and modernity, this book has made a seminal contribution to scholarship in modern Chinese intellectual and cultural history. Highly recommended for both specialists in the field and interested lay readers...
— Leo Ou-fan Lee, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
This volume significantly contributes to the decentering of the May Fourth movement as the defining moment in modern Chinese history. Focusing on the complex interplay between that movement and a rich array of often little-explored trends such as science and Buddhism, it deftly sketches the contours of a historically embedded and culturally layered Chinese modernity.
— Joan Judge, York University
The contents of this volume go beyond the usual range of scholarly assessments and reassessments of May Fourth culture and literature. In widening the horizons of the May Fourth movement and its implications to include suchdiverse topics as language and printing, gender and family, as well as the larger issues of science, religion, nation, and modernity, this book has made a seminal contribution to scholarship in modern Chinese intellectual and cultural history. Highly recommended for both specialists in the field and interested lay readers.
— Leo Ou-fan Lee, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
A collection of well-researched, well-written, and insightful essays…. Beyond the May Fourth Paradigm is an excellent collection of essays that offers many insights and stimuli on how to rethink the complex and contradictory nature of China's modern intellectual and cultural scene.
— China Review International