Lexington Books
Pages: 190
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-4985-6909-5 • Hardback • August 2022 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
978-1-4985-6910-1 • eBook • August 2022 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Li-Chun Hsiao is professor at Waseda University in Tokyo.
Introduction
Chapter One: “Speech after Long Silence”: The 1956 Manifesto and the Obscure(d) Beginnings of a Cold War Modernism
Chapter Two: A Double-edged Sword?: the Rise of the Soldier-Poets and Their Modernist Turn
Chapter Three: Breaking Ground in Splendid Isolation: Death of a Stone Cell and Cold War Ethos
Chapter Four: Two States of One Peculiar Modernism: From the US-Aided Literary Establishment to the Culture of US Aids
Chapter Five: At Home in Exile: The Cold War Modernist, the Expatriate, and the Literature of Exile
Bibliography
About the Author
In this seminal study of Taiwan’s literary modernism in the Cold War context,
Li-Chun Hsiao probes into a number of unexamined assumptions about its rise and development and seeks to tease out a cultural politics and poetics of Cold War modernism in Taiwan mainly by addressing the “soldier-poets” and expatriate writers as a crossover point for a number of discursive practices whose origins are elsewhere: of Cold War ideology, US foreign policy, aesthetic doctrines and literary pedagogy, long-distance Chinese nationalism, among others. It is a superb work of scholarship, painstakingly researched, copiously documented, and gracefully written.
— Chun-san Wang, Asia University
Drawing on a wealth of recent Chinese-language scholarship on the subject produced in Taiwan, this book would make valuable and unique contributions to the studies of postwar Taiwan literature and culture in the transnational English-speaking academic world. In addition, Li-Chun Hsiao’s insightful account of the slate wiped clean by the Cold War contexts, on which Taiwan’s modernist literature thrived, and his unpacking of the contradictory inclinations of the modernist movement in Taiwan—e.g. its reformist practices and traditionalist undercurrents—may also shed light on the studies of modernism in general, whose varied, even conflicting manifestations in earlier periods and different sites parallel its fraught and malleable definitions.
— Sun-chieh Liang, National Taiwan Normal University