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From Youthful Manuscripts to River Elegy: The Chinese Popular Cultural Movement and Political Transformation, 1979-1989 [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 355 pages, weight: 1701 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jun-1997
  • Izdevniecība: The Chinese University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9622017622
  • ISBN-13: 9789622017627
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  • Cena: 31,30 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 355 pages, weight: 1701 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jun-1997
  • Izdevniecība: The Chinese University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9622017622
  • ISBN-13: 9789622017627
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

Among the many books dealing with the epochal changes of China during the eighties, this is probably the first full-length account of the popular cultural movement, or wenhuare. It is the result of collaboration between two Chinese intellectuals: a Beijing cultural activist who played a central role in the movement, and a Hong Kong academic who made first-hand observations of many of the events described. However, it is not personal experience, but rather interviews and documentary evidence on which this work is founded.The narrative has two parallel lines of development, which constantly interact with each other: the political transformation of China during the critical dozen years 1977-89; and the cultural movement itself. The latter followed from an abortive attempt in 1982 to publish the minjian journal Youthful Manuscripts, through the blossoming of many popular cultural enterprises, including the potent River Elegy television series, and finally to the Tiananmen tragedy, at which point the two lines of development finally coalesced. The book is filled with details, including the background, character, and personal connections of a large number of people who are related to the movement, which make interesting reading and can be a useful source for further studies.Two important (and somewhat surprising) links emerge from this essentially historical study: first, the origin of the movement is traced through Beijing University to earlier generations of intellectuals and hence the May Fourth Movement; secondly, it turns out that, even though the impetus of the movement came from intellectuals acting outside official channels, what had made it possible was really the tolerance, and even the good will and support of progressive elements within the Party. In this context the future role of Chinese intellectuals in the rapidly changing post-Deng China is discussed towards the end of the book.

Preface ix(2)
Abbreviations and Special Terms xi
Introduction 1(12)
Who Were the Minyun Fenzi? 3(2)
Who Were the Cultural Activists? 5(4)
Why the Cultural Activists? 9(4)
Prologue 13(4)
1 From Catastrophe to Recovery
17(42)
From High Hopes to a Bleak Prospect
17(9)
The First Turning Point
26(4)
Deng's Second Political Resurrection
30(6)
Searching for a Breakthrough
36(8)
To Re-establish the Criterion of Truth
44(8)
The Return of the Old Guards
52(7)
2 Making a New Start
59(30)
The Hinge of Fate
60(4)
Rebuilding the Leadership Structure
64(4)
The Party on a New Footing
68(8)
Back to Science and Education
76(6)
To Reform and Open Up
82(7)
3 Finding a Minjian Cultural Space
89(40)
The Spring of Beijing
89(6)
Government Control of the Press
95(5)
Two Unsuccessful Attempts to Beat the System
100(8)
Groping Towards the Future
108(5)
The New Editorial Board
113(7)
Surviving the First Crisis
120(3)
The First Taste of Success
123(6)
4 A Revival of the Intellectual Tradition
129(30)
The Modern Chinese Intellectual Tradition
129(12)
The Golden Triennium
141(7)
Harking Back to the Shuyuan Tradition
148(5)
The Vision of a Minjian University
153(6)
5 The Emergence of a Cultural Movement
159(28)
The Black Mountain Salon
159(4)
A Second Turn to the West
163(8)
Going Outside the State System
171(4)
Riding Out a Further Crisis onto Greater Success
175(3)
The Incipient Cultural Movement
178(4)
The Looming Crisis
182(5)
6 From Setback to Yet Greater Success
187(28)
Hu's Downfall
188(6)
Zhao as Secretary General
194(4)
Two Different Forms of Existential Commitment
198(3)
The Academy in Full Blossom
201(5)
Reaching and Capturing the Masses Through Modern Art
206(3)
Growth Pains
209(6)
7 The Gathering Storm
215(24)
The Transformation of a Television Documentary
215(6)
An Elegy That Captivated the Nation
221(6)
Disenchantment with Reform
227(3)
The Fateful Spring of 1989
230(9)
8 A Fateful Encounter with History
239(32)
Where Fate Intervened
239(5)
The Hunger Strike
244(3)
The Historic Moment
247(5)
The Tragic Climax
252(3)
The Wofosi Conference
255(7)
Epilogue
262(9)
Conclusion 271(10)
Dengism after June Fourth 271(3)
Intellectuals in Disarray 274(4)
The Intellectual and the State in the Modern World 278(3)
Appendices 281(30)
A Chronology of Major Events 281(26)
B Participants in Selected Cultural Activist Groups and Events 307(4)
Glossary 311(10)
Bibliography 321(12)
Index 333