Deathsong of the River - (Cornell East Asia Series) by Xiaokang Su & Luxiang Wang (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Perhaps the most daring TV documentary series ever produced in mainland China, which directly affected the thinking of Chinese youth on the eve of the 1989 democracy movement.
- About the Author: Richard W. Bodman and Pin P. Wan teach Chinese language, literature, and Asian studies at St. Olaf College in Minnesota.
- 370 Pages
- History, Asia
- Series Name: Cornell East Asia Series
Description
Book Synopsis
Perhaps the most daring TV documentary series ever produced in mainland China, which directly affected the thinking of Chinese youth on the eve of the 1989 democracy movement. This richly-annotated translation of the original filmscript by Su Xiaokang and Wang Luxiang puts the series in its intellectual and artistic context and is suitable for use in classes on Chinese culture and contemporary China, with or without the videotape.
Review Quotes
As close to a definitive treatment of He Shang as we shall ever get.
-- "Journal of Asian Studies"Highly recommended. It fits the needs, above all, of undergraduate and graduate courses that use the videotape of He Shang as teaching material, but its usefulness goes well beyond this, providing an accomplished exposition of a highly complex cultural, intellectual and political phenomenon.
-- "Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs"The kind of text that university Chinese studies departments should be teaching as a literary/cultural text alongside or instead of canonical "literary" texts, and the book that Bodman and Wan have assembled greatly facilitates such a project.... an almost perfect package.
-- "The China Quarterly"About the Author
Richard W. Bodman and Pin P. Wan teach Chinese language, literature, and Asian studies at St. Olaf College in Minnesota.