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Fr. 26.90
Xu Xu
Bird Talk and Other Stories By Xu Xu - Modern Tales of a Chinese Romantic
English · Paperback / Softback
Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks (title will be specially ordered)
Description
Introducing the works of a major Chinese writer--liberal, cosmopolitan, and lyrically exotic--once banned but now embraced, and newly "discovered" in the West.
List of contents
Contents
Acknowledgments
Xu Xu’s Literary Journey through Twentieth-Century China
A Note on the Translation
鬼戀
Ghost Love
猶太的彗星
The Jewish Comet
鳥語
Bird Talk
百靈樹
The All-Souls Tree
來高升路的一個女人
When Ah Heung Came to Gousing Road
A Chinese Romantic’s Journey through Time and Space: Xu Xu and Transnational Chinese Romanticism
References
About the author
Xu Xu 徐訏 (1908-1980) was an influential Chinese writer who enjoyed tremendous popularity throughout the late 1930s and 1940s. After graduating from Peking University in 1931 he moved to Shanghai in 1933 to begin his literary career. He left for Paris to continue his studies in 1936 and returned to China during the war against Japan. He left for Hong Kong in 1950, and in his later fiction from Hong Kong he mostly explored the theme of nostalgia experienced by countless Chinese displaced during the civil war. Xu Xu's works were banned on the mainland from 1949 until the 1980s, and his work is now widely read in China and a frequent source material for television and the stage. In Hong Kong Xu Xu edited several literary journals and taught Chinese literature at different colleges and universities, eventually chairing the Chinese Department at Hong Kong Baptist University until his death in 1980.
Summary
Introducing the works of a major Chinese writer—liberal, cosmopolitan, and lyrically exotic—once banned but now embraced, and newly "discovered" in the West.
Xu Xu 徐訏 (1908-1980) was one of the most widely read Chinese authors of the 1930s to 1960s. His popular urban gothic tales, his exotic spy fiction, and his quasi-existentialist love stories full of nostalgia and melancholy offer today’s readers an unusual glimpse into China’s turbulent twentieth century.
These translations--spanning a period of some thirty years, from 1937 until 1965--bring to life some of Xu Xu’s most representative short fictions from prewar Shanghai and postwar Hong Kong and Taiwan.
The Afterword illustrates that Xu Xu’s idealistic tendencies in defiance of the politicization of art exemplify his affinity with European romanticism and link his work to a global literary modernity.
Foreword
Promotion targeting Chinese literature and literature in translation
Promotion and advertising at the Association of Asian Studies Conference and American Translators Association
Partnering with various China-related organizations across the US for giveaways and advertising. (China Institute, Confucius Institute.)
Galleys/e-galleys (100+ copies) to library media outlets, national media outlets, trade publications, and audience-focused websites and reviewers. (New York Times, LA Times, The New Yorker, Book Riot, Booklist, BookPage, Foreword, Kirkus, Library Journal, NPR, Publishers Weekly, SF Chronicle, Shelf Awareness, and many more.)
Digital review copies on Edelweiss and Netgalley
Translator is very active and is an Associate Professor of Chinese at San Francisco State University. Planning to set up interviews with translator who can also speak about author beyond just translation. He is close with Author's daughter.
Pursue endorsements from well-known China educators and journalists
Special academic outreach to students and scholars in Chinese Studies departments
Direct mailings and newsletter advertising to Chinese-language programs at the high school, middle school, and college levels
Additional text
"An excellent and much needed contribution to the field of Chinese and comparative literary studies that provides reading pleasure as well as fertile ground for further literary research and discussion."
—Birgit Linder, Chinese Literature Today
"This well-conceived volume tells us much about Xu Xu, the times in which he lived, and it is a delight to read."
—The Journal of Chinese Humanities
"In Xu Xu’s stories, the narrators can recall the time that’s gone, and through their sorrow find “luster and warmth”."
—The Asian Review of Books
"Mystical, other-worldly, and fascinating."
—The Portland Book Review
"Beautifully crafted with deep feeling and great skill, [Xu Xu's stories] shine with a brilliance that dazzles."
—Yuan-tsung Chen, author of The Secret Listener: An Ingenue in Mao's Court
"Written in a witty, light-hearted tone, the story highlights how Hong Kong was romanticised as a city of new beginnings and businesses – a place where diligence, hard work and integrity could pay off. This is where many like Xu Xu, sick with longing and trauma and facing a harsh new world, could begin to heal themselves."
—South China Morning Post
"This outstanding anthology, with its informative, engaging, and well-argued introduction and afterword, can be at once a welcome source and textbook for scholars and students who are interested in twentieth-century Chinese literature and global literary modernity, and an enjoyable and pleasant book for all readers, who will certainly be deeply touched by the imaginative splendor and otherworldly sanctuaries that Xu Xu’s stories create."
—Yanhong Zhu, China Review International
"Unknown writers are only unknown to those who cannot read them. Windows open when a translator unlocks them. That has happened here. Green’s engaging translation of stories by novelist Xu Xu allows readers of English to understand—finally—why he is so popular and important in China and Hong Kong. The collection includes a wide, wonderful range of topics, times, geographies, and styles. These are stories that illuminate and captivate."
—Howard Goldblatt, a Guggenheim Fellow, is an internationally renowned translator of Chinese fiction, including the novels of Mo Yan, the 2012 winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature
"With style, humor, warmth, and pathos, Xu Xu turned the mid-century Chinese experience of revolution, war, and displacement into compulsively readable pop modernist romances. In this volume of translations, Frederik Green brings this unique and imaginative modern voice and his world to vivid life for English readers for the first time."
—Andrew F. Jones, Louis B. Agassiz Professor of Chinese, University of California, Berkeley
"Xu Xu was a writer poised between worlds, a chronicler of exile and diaspora, witness to the vibrant ferment of a British Hong Kong, and the phantoms that haunt what was once a Japanese Taiwan. Foreshadowing many a Chinese ghost story, and foreseeing many a cross-cultural romance, Xu’s stories were both snapshots of the past and uncannily visionary predictions of our present."
—Jonathan Clements, author of A Brief History of China
"One of the most widely read Chinese authors of the mid-20th century finally available in English translation. A delight for scholars and general readers."
—Chris Wen-chao Li, D.Phil., Oxford University. Professor of Chinese Linguistics, San Francisco State University
"Xu Xu’s fiction opens a window onto Shanghai’s roaring 1930s, China’s War of Resistance against Japan, and the post-war experience of Chinese exiles in Hong Kong. Highly recommended."
—Jianye He, Librarian for Chinese Collections, University of California, Berkeley
"An intriguing selection of short fiction by one of the great storytellers of modern China and postwar Hong Kong, elegantly translated and prefaced with an insightful and engaging introduction."
—Jennifer Feeley, Ph.D, Yale University and translator of Xi Xi’s Not Written Words
Product details
Authors | Xu Xu |
Assisted by | Frederik H Green (Translation) |
Publisher | Stone Bridge Press |
Languages | English |
Product format | Paperback / Softback |
Released | 26.05.2020 |
EAN | 9781611720556 |
ISBN | 978-1-61172-055-6 |
No. of pages | 224 |
Subjects |
Fiction
> Narrative literature
Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative literary studies Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous China, Short Stories, Fiction in translation, HISTORY / Asia / China, LITERARY CRITICISM / Asian / Chinese |
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