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Title The unbroken chain : an anthology of Taiwan fiction since 1926 / edited by Joseph S.M. Lau
Published Bloomington : Indiana University Press, [1983]
©1983

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Description 1 online resource (xvi, 279 pages)
Series Chinese literature in translation
Chinese literature in translation.
Contents Taiwan fiction during the Japanese period (1895-1945). "The steelyard" / Lai Ho -- "The doctor's mother" / Wu Cho-liu -- "Autumn note" / Chu Tein-jen -- "Mother Goose gets married" / Yang K'uei
Taiwan fiction since 1945. "Together through thick and thin" / Chung Li-ho -- "Lunar New Year's feast" / Lin Hai-yin -- "Betel Palm Village" / Cheng Ch'ing-wen -- "The spheric man" / Li Ch'iao -- "Night freight" / Ch'en Ying-chen -- "I love Mary" / Huang Ch'un-ming -- "Chrysalis" / Liu Ta-jen -- "The net" / Ou-yang Tzu -- "The story of three springs / Wang Chen-ho -- "Red boy" / Chang Hsi-kuo -- "The rain from the sun" / Li Yung-p'ing -- "Fire" / Tung Nien -- "Birds of a feather" / Chang Ta-ch'un
Summary The Unbroken Chain is the first anthology in any language to present the diversified achievement of Taiwan fiction from the period of Japanese occupation to the present. Representing four generations of Taiwanese writers, the seventeen stories in this unique volume demonstrate that, although Taiwan fiction originated under a foreign regime, it has maintained a distinct Chinese identity nurtured by the fervent national consciousness of its practitioners. The four stories in Part I, written during the period of Japanese occupation, reveal a common concern with national self-respect and pride in the face of foreign domination. In Part II, thirteen stories trace the evolution of themes and styles in Taiwan fiction since 1945, from the "transit-passenger" mentality of the late forties and early fifties, through a period of modernist literary experimentation in the 1960s, to a search for social and cultural roots in the so-called hsiang-t'u morality tales of the 1970s. Illustrative of the last are two especially powerful stories, Huang Ch'un-ming's "I Love Mary" and Ch'en Ying-chen's "Night Freight," about the corrosion of Chinese identity by materialistic American culture. Each selection is prefaced by a short biographical sketch that identifies the special qualities of the author and places the story within its sociohistorical context. A valuable introduction for the student as well as for the general reader interested in Chinese life and culture, The Unbroken Chain establishes Taiwan fiction as an important link in the great chain of modern Chinese writing begun by the May Fourth Movement of 1919
Analysis Chinese fiction 20th century Translations into English
Chinese fiction Taiwan Translations into English
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Notes Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL
Print version record
Subject Chinese fiction -- Taiwan -- Translations into English
Chinese fiction -- 20th century -- Translations into English
Chinese fiction
Erzählung
Anthologie
Taiwan
Taiwan
Genre/Form Taiwanesische Erzählung
Translations
Form Electronic book
Author Lau, Joseph S. M., 1934- editor.
ISBN 9780253051745
0253051746