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Yang Mu, the recipient of the 2007 International Prize for Literature Written in Chinese, is a well-known bicultural poet. Born in Taiwan during the last phase of the Japanese occupation, his life and writing have been influenced by competing forces in the historical, political, intellectual, linguistic, and aesthetic realms. Yang Mu's humanist sensibility has offered critical insights into the dangers of binary opposition and ideological thinking. His poetry has appealed to readers worldwide and is accessible in English, French, German, Dutch, Swedish, Japanese, and Korean translations.
This study of Yang Mu's poetics examines the writer's literary choices from a cross-cultural perspective, highlighting the relationship between issues of international concern and modern cultural theories. Yang Mu's dialogic lyric voice engages peoples from different eras and cultures. This is achieved by addressing contemporary crises between nations or by responding to philosophical questions about identity, memory, and time. Yang Mu's works exhibit a true transcultural outlook that will significantly contribute to the development of 21st century world poetry.
List of contents
Contents: Comparative poetics Chinese-western - Cultural globalization - Global literary history - Cross-cultural intertextuality - Yang Mu studies - Modern Chinese poetry - Biculturalism and hybridity - Dialogism in poetry - Chinese national narratives - History plays - Post-colonial Taiwan - The Taiwan Straits issues - Taiwan cultural discourse - Identity politics - Romanticism and Chinese poetry - Modernism and Chinese poetry - Ireland-Taiwan analogy - The waterside myth - Temporality discourse.
About the author
The Author: Lisa Lai-Ming Wong is Assistant Professor of Humanities at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Her recent works have appeared in journals such as
New Literary History, the
Keats-Shelley Review, and
Modern China.
Rays of the Searching Sun appears on the list of «Essential Works of Taiwanese Literature» published in the journal
World Literature Today, January-February 2010.
Report
«Lisa Wong presents a brilliant intertextual analysis of the innovative and highly personal poetry of the contemporary Taiwanese poet Yang Mu, focusing on the cosmopolitan dimension of his work.» (Douwe Fokkema, Emeritus Professor of Comparative Literature, Utrecht University)