ABSTRACT
With the inclusion of twelve original articles by established and emerging international scholars, this volume offers critical reading of literary and cinematic texts produced in China and Sinophone communities between the 1950s and 2010s. The articles portray the lineage and mutations of the Chinese Bildungsroman, providing insights into the tensions between individual and society; nation and the world; and the multiple social, ecological, and virtual realities of recent decades. Concerned with how coming-of-age narratives have persistently returned and evolved over time, the book addresses themes such as family and social change; gender, class, and generational divides, local/global politics, and the ecological and posthuman turns in Chinese/Sinophone culture. It offers a fresh look on how the transnational and transgenerational journeys of Bildungsroman and coming-of-age narratives continuously transform and reinvigorate generic conventions, to explore adolescence as a formative social force and aesthetic experience in Chinese/Sinophone literature and film.This book aims to open up dialogues for better understanding emergent cultural forms that reflect social instability arising from the global spread of contemporary neo-liberal capitalism, and to constitute the foundation of an innovative history of Sinophone literature. It does not only take into account the complicated survival struggles of the subjects of Mao's revolution including refugee-immigrants turned colonial subjects, but also the interaction between literature and the arts as well as between human and nonhuman agents (place, material culture, nature, etc.).
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part Section I|67 pages
The Global Sixties and Leftist Activism
chapter 2|21 pages
Growing Up in an Age of Turbulence: The Bildungsromane of Young Hong Kong Writers in the Sixties
chapter 3|23 pages
Abandoning Iowa's Modernism: Wan Kin-lau Renounces His Bildung in the Cold War Era
part Section II|64 pages
Afterlives and Unstable Repositionings
chapter 4|21 pages
Mapping and Contesting the Notion of Sinophone: The Coming of Age of Global Chinese Literature
chapter 5|20 pages
The Coming of Age of Hong Kong: Dung Kai-cheung's Celestial Creations and the Works of Man: Vividness and Veracity
part Section III|66 pages
Screening Urban Precarity
chapter 7|25 pages
Little Pinks, Shamate Kids, and the Involuted Generation: A Coming-of-Age Portrait of China's Post-1990s Generation
chapter 8|16 pages
Sentimentality and the Capitalization of Humanity: On Anthony Chen's Ilo Ilo
chapter 9|22 pages
Years of the Yearning Youth: Growth, Flows, and the Dilemma of Maturity in Hong Kong Coming-of-Age Films
part Section IV|66 pages
The Ecological and the Posthuman
