Buch, Englisch, Band 150, 284 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 560 g
Reihe: Sinica Leidensia
Rupture and Continuity in Modern Chinese Detective Fiction (1896-1949)
Buch, Englisch, Band 150, 284 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 560 g
Reihe: Sinica Leidensia
ISBN: 978-90-04-43127-0
Verlag: Brill
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 A Brief History of Modern Detective Fiction in China
2 Global Form and Local Expressions: Alternative Modernities in Modern Chinese Detective Fiction
3 Overview
Part 1: The Formative Stage: Chinese Detective Fiction during the Late Qing Period
1 Meeting Detective Fiction: Western Detective Fiction in Chinese Translation
1 The Spirit of Chivalric Vengeance: Lin Shu’s Translation of A Study in Scarlet
2 New Civilizations and Old Morals: Zhou Guisheng, Wu Jianren, and The Serpents’ Coils
3 Quwei: Zhou Zuoren and “The Gold-Bug”
2 The Detective Story in Traditional Clothes: the Embryonic Form of Native Chinese Detective Fiction
1 Sherlock Holmes and the “Quickening Incense”: the Poisoning Case in The Travels of Lao Can
2 To Be a Detective or a Cruel Judge: Judge Lu’s Dilemma in The Shining Light in the Sea of Aggrieved Cases
3 An Alternative View of Chinese Detective Fiction: the zhiguai Tale “The Shouzhen” in Chinese Detective Cases
4 The New Woman and the New Fiction: Lü Simian’s Chinese Female Detectives
Part 2: The Golden Age: Chinese Detective Fiction in the Republican Period
3 “Disguised Textbooks for Science”: Detective Fiction as a Pedagogical Tool
1 Chinese Detective Writers and the Community of Scientific Discourse
2 Three Aspects of Scientific Discourse in Republican Detective Fiction
4 Justice and the Chivalric Detective
1 Private Detective Huo Sang and Mozi’s Ideas of jian’ai and youxia
2 Burglar-Detective Lu Ping and the Philosophy of Thieves in Zhuangzi
5 Shanghai Modern: the Metropolitan Landscape in Chinese Detective Fiction
1 Shanghai Cosmopolitanism and Republican Detective Fiction Writers
2 Redrawing the Spectacle of Shanghai Modernity
3 The Transnational Imagination of Republican Detective Fiction
6 Domestic Crimes in Everyday Life
1 Local Clues from Daily Life
2 Family Crimes during the Transitional Period
3 Shanghai Alleyways in Cheng Xiaoqing’s Huo Sang Detective Stories
Conclusion: the Legacies of the Late Qing Mode and the Republican Mode: Echoes and Variations after 1949
1 The Republican Mode and the Detective Fiction of Postwar Hong Kong
2 The Late Qing Mode and Robert van Gulik’s Judge Dee Series
Character List
Works Cited
Index