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Redefining Chinese-ness in the era of globalization: A comparative approach.
Thesis information
Author:
Shi, Anbin.;
Advisor(s):
Liu, Kang
Degree:
Ph.D.
School:
The Pennsylvania State University.
Year:
2001Full Abstract
During the 1990s, globalization gave rise to a comprehensive societal and cultural transformation in contemporary China, which made the modernist conceptualization of a singular, unitary, and homogenous Chinese-ness problematic. Instead, Chinese-ness can now be redefined through an analysis of peripheral, underground, and alternative aspects of literature and culture in 1990s China. This study demonstrates that Chinese marginality, a powerful space and site of “minor” literatures and subcultures, has played a major role in constructing a pluralistic and dynamic Chinese-ness in the era of globalization. The objects for investigation are seminal literary/musical/visual texts by a group of marginalized writers and artists: underground rock musicians, women, gays, and ethnic minorities.;concentrates upon concrete, specific aspects of Chinese-ness. As a category of socio-cultural identity, the redefinition of Chinese-ness in the era of globalization is based upon ongoing global/local conflicts, compromises, and negotiations, mainly those between Maoist revolutionary legacies and the commercialized consumer culture brought into China by global capitalism. Rock musician Cui Jian's image of “eggs under the red flag” aptly suggests that the new socio-cultural identity is grounded both in an inheritance from and a rebirth out of Chinese tradition. As a category of gender identity, the redefinition of Chinese-ness aims to challenge the dual repression inculcated by both the indigenous patriarchal tradition and white-male-centered Western hegemony. The reassertion of female
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