Resisting Spirits Resisting Spirits
China Understandings Today

Resisting Spirits

Drama Reform and Cultural Transformation in the People's Republic of China

    • $24.99
    • $24.99

Publisher Description

Resisting Spirits is a reconsideration of the significance and periodization of literary production in the high socialist era, roughly 1953 through 1966, specifically focused on Mao-era culture workers’ experiments with ghosts and ghost plays. Maggie Greene combines rare manuscript materials—such as theatre troupes’ annotated practice scripts—with archival documents, memoirs, newspapers, and films to track key debates over the direction of socialist aesthetics. Through arguments over the role of ghosts in literature, Greene illuminates the ways in which culture workers were able to make space for aesthetic innovation and contestation both despite and because of the constantly shifting political demands of the Mao era. Ghosts were caught up in the broader discourse of superstition, modernization, and China’s social and cultural future. Yet, as Greene demonstrates, the ramifications of those concerns as manifested in the actual craft of writing and performing plays led to further debates in the realm of literature itself: If we remove the ghost from a ghost play, does it remain a ghost play? Does it lose its artistic value, its didactic value, or both? At the heart of Greene’s intervention is “just reading”: the book regards literature first as literature, rather than searching immediately for its political subtext, and the voices of dramatists themselves finally upstage those of Mao’s inner circle. Ironically, this surface reading reveals layers of history that scholars of the Mao era have often ignored, including the ways in which social relations and artistic commitments continued to inform the world of art. Resisting Spirits thus illuminates the origins of more famous literary inquisitions, showing how the arguments surrounding ghost plays and the fates of their authors place the origins of the Cultural Revolution several years earlier, with a radical new shift in the discourse of theatre.
 

GENRE
Arts & Entertainment
RELEASED
2019
August 9
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
260
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Michigan Press
SELLER
Chicago Distribution Center
SIZE
2.6
MB
Tales of Futures Past Tales of Futures Past
2014
Opera and the City Opera and the City
2013
Occidentalism Occidentalism
1995
The Oxford Handbook of Modern Chinese Literatures The Oxford Handbook of Modern Chinese Literatures
2016
Performing the Socialist State Performing the Socialist State
2023
Adapting Western Classics for the Chinese Stage Adapting Western Classics for the Chinese Stage
2018
The Global White Snake The Global White Snake
2021
Righteous Revolutionaries Righteous Revolutionaries
2022
Televising Chineseness Televising Chineseness
2022
Power over Property Power over Property
2020
Governing and Ruling Governing and Ruling
2021
Chinese Netizens' Opinions on Death Sentences Chinese Netizens' Opinions on Death Sentences
2021