Cosmopolitan Publics - Anglophone Print Culture in Semi-colonial Shanghai (Hardcover)


Early twentieth-century China paired the local community to the world - a place and time when English dominated urban-centered higher and secondary education and Chinese-edited English-language magazines surfaced as a new form of translingual practice. ""Cosmopolitan Publics"" focuses on China's 'cosmopolitans' - Western-educated intellectuals who returned to Shanghai in the late 1920s to publish in English and who, ultimately, became both cultural translators and citizens of the wider world. Shuang Shen highlights their work in publications such as ""The China Critic"" and ""T'ien Hsia"", providing readers with a broader understanding of the role and function of cultural mixing, translation, and multilingualism in China's cultural modernity. Decades later, as nationalist biases and political restrictions emerged within China, the influence of the cosmopolitans was neglected and the significance of cosmopolitan practice was underplayed. Shen's encompassing study revisits and presents the experience of Chinese modernity as far more heterogeneous, emergent, and transnational than it has been characterized until now.

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Product Description

Early twentieth-century China paired the local community to the world - a place and time when English dominated urban-centered higher and secondary education and Chinese-edited English-language magazines surfaced as a new form of translingual practice. ""Cosmopolitan Publics"" focuses on China's 'cosmopolitans' - Western-educated intellectuals who returned to Shanghai in the late 1920s to publish in English and who, ultimately, became both cultural translators and citizens of the wider world. Shuang Shen highlights their work in publications such as ""The China Critic"" and ""T'ien Hsia"", providing readers with a broader understanding of the role and function of cultural mixing, translation, and multilingualism in China's cultural modernity. Decades later, as nationalist biases and political restrictions emerged within China, the influence of the cosmopolitans was neglected and the significance of cosmopolitan practice was underplayed. Shen's encompassing study revisits and presents the experience of Chinese modernity as far more heterogeneous, emergent, and transnational than it has been characterized until now.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Rutgers University Press

Country of origin

United States

Release date

April 2009

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

April 2009

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 152 x 23mm (L x W x T)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

200

ISBN-13

978-0-8135-4542-4

Barcode

9780813545424

Categories

LSN

0-8135-4542-0



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