The Paths that Lead Nowhere: Chinese Misty Poetry and ModernityStanford University, 1996 - 436 pages |
Contents
Choosing A Hero | 5 |
Part | 24 |
A Past That Repeats Itself | 47 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
aesthetic already Anthology argues attempt autonomy becomes Bei Dao Beijing believe Bian Zhilin blank China Chinese cultural Chinese literature Chinese Misty classical Communist consciousness constitutes contemporary Chinese critics Cultural Revolution Dai Wangshu Dao's Daoist dead death desire dominant dream emergence empty English translation exile existence experience gaze Gu Cheng Heidegger hero heroic Hu Shi human ideal identified identity ideology individual interiority Jameson John Minford language Lian literary living Marx means memory metaphor Michelle Yeh Misty Poetry modern Chinese poetry modernist modernist poetry mother movement natural world never Nietzsche object oneself ontological origin particular past poetic poets political position present prosopopoeia pure readers reality represent retrieve Root-searching self-consciousness sense Shu Ting social society sonnet space speaker symbolic Symbolist temporal things thinking Ting's tradition understand unity universal Wen Yiduo West Western words writing Yang Lian Yang's