語系:
繁體中文
English
說明(常見問題)
回圖書館首頁
手機版館藏查詢
登入
回首頁
切換:
標籤
|
MARC模式
|
ISBD
Urban landscape and cultural imagina...
~
Sun, Shao-yi.
FindBook
Google Book
Amazon
博客來
Urban landscape and cultural imagination: Literature, film, and visuality in semi-colonial Shanghai, 1927-1937 (China).
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Urban landscape and cultural imagination: Literature, film, and visuality in semi-colonial Shanghai, 1927-1937 (China)./
作者:
Sun, Shao-yi.
面頁冊數:
433 p.
附註:
Adviser: Dominic Cheung.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International60-06A.
標題:
Cinema. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9933686
ISBN:
0599345489
Urban landscape and cultural imagination: Literature, film, and visuality in semi-colonial Shanghai, 1927-1937 (China).
Sun, Shao-yi.
Urban landscape and cultural imagination: Literature, film, and visuality in semi-colonial Shanghai, 1927-1937 (China).
- 433 p.
Adviser: Dominic Cheung.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Southern California, 1999.
This work is a study of the city of Shanghai's semi-colonial culture during the years of 1927 to 1937, the first decade of Chiang Kai-Shek's Nanjing Government. Drawing upon a wide variety of literary, cultural, and film theories, the author investigates various genres and types of “Shanghai narratives” that have been largely neglected or rarely researched: fiction, film, architecture, advertising, and fashion. The author further contends that, with the advent and flourishing of various models of interpretation that tried to “make sense” of the metropolis, Shanghai quickly transformed from a “natural landscape” to a deeply-layered “cultural landscape.” The investigation of the competing discourses of the constructive and destructive potential of the metropolis, therefore, is more of an attempt to explore how the urban landscape of Shanghai was culturally imagined in ideological and gender terms than of an endeavor to document an already vanished past.
ISBN: 0599345489Subjects--Topical Terms:
854529
Cinema.
Urban landscape and cultural imagination: Literature, film, and visuality in semi-colonial Shanghai, 1927-1937 (China).
LDR
:03142nam 2200301 a 45
001
934117
005
20110509
008
110509s1999 eng d
020
$a
0599345489
035
$a
(UnM)AAI9933686
035
$a
AAI9933686
040
$a
UnM
$c
UnM
100
1
$a
Sun, Shao-yi.
$3
1257840
245
1 0
$a
Urban landscape and cultural imagination: Literature, film, and visuality in semi-colonial Shanghai, 1927-1937 (China).
300
$a
433 p.
500
$a
Adviser: Dominic Cheung.
500
$a
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 60-06, Section: A, page: 2034.
502
$a
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Southern California, 1999.
520
$a
This work is a study of the city of Shanghai's semi-colonial culture during the years of 1927 to 1937, the first decade of Chiang Kai-Shek's Nanjing Government. Drawing upon a wide variety of literary, cultural, and film theories, the author investigates various genres and types of “Shanghai narratives” that have been largely neglected or rarely researched: fiction, film, architecture, advertising, and fashion. The author further contends that, with the advent and flourishing of various models of interpretation that tried to “make sense” of the metropolis, Shanghai quickly transformed from a “natural landscape” to a deeply-layered “cultural landscape.” The investigation of the competing discourses of the constructive and destructive potential of the metropolis, therefore, is more of an attempt to explore how the urban landscape of Shanghai was culturally imagined in ideological and gender terms than of an endeavor to document an already vanished past.
520
$a
In emphasizing the hybrid nature of the urban experience of Shanghai, the author aims first to challenge the dominant discourse which celebrates the rural as the fundamental expression of the “indigenous” and “authentic” China and which reduces Shanghai as a mere symbol of national humiliation and moral degradation. The author's second aim is to establish Shanghai and its culture as an alternative model that not only challenges the unitary discourse of Chinese revolutionary nationalism, but also questions the conception that the metropolis was nothing but a Western import. The third aim of this work is to renounce totalizing explanatory models in dealing with Shanghai's semi-colonial culture and to offer an alternative reading of the city by introducing the concepts of negotiation, resistance, dynamism, location, fluidity, and spatiality. Cities do not speak for themselves. It is humans who speak of cities and give them narrative power. In this sense, imagination, although seldom considered to be a material force, transcends its conceptual nature and becomes a concrete force in shaping and producing spaces and histories.
590
$a
School code: 0208.
650
4
$a
Cinema.
$3
854529
650
4
$a
History, Asia, Australia and Oceania.
$3
626624
650
4
$a
Literature, Asian.
$3
1017599
690
$a
0305
690
$a
0332
690
$a
0900
710
2 0
$a
University of Southern California.
$3
700129
773
0
$t
Dissertation Abstracts International
$g
60-06A.
790
$a
0208
790
1 0
$a
Cheung, Dominic,
$e
advisor
791
$a
Ph.D.
792
$a
1999
856
4 0
$u
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9933686
筆 0 讀者評論
館藏地:
全部
電子資源
出版年:
卷號:
館藏
1 筆 • 頁數 1 •
1
條碼號
典藏地名稱
館藏流通類別
資料類型
索書號
使用類型
借閱狀態
預約狀態
備註欄
附件
W9104714
電子資源
11.線上閱覽_V
電子書
EB W9104714
一般使用(Normal)
在架
0
1 筆 • 頁數 1 •
1
多媒體
評論
新增評論
分享你的心得
Export
取書館
處理中
...
變更密碼
登入