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Journal ArticleDOI

Toward “Glocalized” orientations: Current literary and cultural studies in China

Ning Wang
- 27 Oct 2007 - 
- Vol. 34, Iss: 2, pp 35-48
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TLDR
Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper discussed how Cultural Studies is introduced into the Chinese context, how it is integrated with domestic elite culture studies and literary studies, and how cultural studies is institutionalized in Chinese context and developed into the phase of carrying on equal dialogues with the Western scholarship in the age of globalization.
Abstract
Globalization has indeed exerted strong influence on China’s literary and cultural studies. The present essay first of all deals with the controversial issue of globalization with the author’s reconstruction of it from a Chinese perspective on the basis of his previous observations. Then it discusses cultural studies, including studies of elite culture and its products challenged by popular culture, in China. It lays particular emphasis on the currently prevailing Cultural Studies introduced from the West into China at the beginning of the 1990s. The author addresses the following issues: how Cultural Studies is introduced into the Chinese context, how it is integrated with domestic elite culture studies and literary studies, how it is institutionalized in the Chinese context, and how it is developing into the phase of carrying on equal dialogues with the Western scholarship in the age of globalization. To the author, Cultural Studies has a lot in common with literary studies, especially in the Chinese context, so these two branches of learning should not necessarily be opposed to one another. A sort of dialogue and complement rather than opposition between literary and cultural studies could be realized. Even in the age of globalization, when many of the other disciplines of the humanities are severely challenged, comparative literature, merging with cultural studies, is still flourishing as it is closely related to the debate on the issue of globalization. Although both the two disciplines are closely related to the advent of globalization and have travelled from the West to China, they have after all been “glocalized” in the Chinese context with certain Chinese characteristics. That is why they still survive the age of globalization.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Chinese Literary and Cultural Trends in a Postrevolutionary Era

TL;DR: In the wake of its reform and opening to the outside world during the past three decades, China has indeed entered a post-revolutionary or postsocialist era in which economic construction is highlighted to such an extreme that class struggle and large-scale mass movements are never called for in any public media.
Journal ArticleDOI

Challenges facing China and harmony as a state strategy

TL;DR: After its defeat in the Opium Wars, China was drawn into the orbit of Western influence and de-westernization has always been one of the hotly debated topics among Chinese intellectuals as mentioned in this paper.