E-Book, Englisch, 414 Seiten, eBook
Watson / Williams British Romanticism in Asia
1. Auflage 2019
ISBN: 978-981-13-3001-8
Verlag: Springer Singapore
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
The Reception, Translation, and Transformation of Romantic Literature in India and East Asia
E-Book, Englisch, 414 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Asia-Pacific and Literature in English
ISBN: 978-981-13-3001-8
Verlag: Springer Singapore
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
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Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction .- British Romanticism in Asia, 1820–1950: Modernity, Tradition, and Transformation in India and East Asia.- Section I: Romanticism in Asia: Cross-Cultural Networks.- The News from India: Emma Roberts and the Construction of Late Romanticism.- Flora Japonica : Linnaean Connections Between Britain and Japan During the Romantic Period.- An ‘Exot’ Teacher of Romanticism in Japan: Lafcadio Hearn and the Literature of the Ghostly.- On William Empson’s Romantic Legacy in China.- Section II: Colonialism and Resistance.- Romanticism in Colonial Korea: Coterie Literary Journals and the Emergence of Modern Poetry in the Early 1920s.- "Truth in Beauty and Beauty in Truth": Rabindranath Tagore’s Appropriation of John Keats’ "Ode on a Grecian Urn" (1819).- Romantic, Rebel, and Reactionary: The Metamorphosis of Byron in Twentieth-Century China.- Section III: Nature, Aesthetics, and Translation.- Nature and the Natural: Translating Wordsworth’s "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" (1807/15) into Chinese.- "With Sidewise Crab-Walk Western Writing": Tradition and Modernity in Shimazaki Toson and Natsume Soseki.- Of Ponds, Lakes, and the Sea: Shoyo, Shakespeare, and Romanticism.- Section IV: Bodies and the Cosmos.- Nogami Yaeko’s Adaptations of Austen Novels: Allegorising Women’s Bodies.- The Romantic Skylark in Taiwanese Literature: Shelleyan Religious Scepticism in Xu Zhimo and Yang Mu.- A Japanese Blake: Embodied Visions in William Blake’s The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (1790) and Tezuka Osamu’s Phoenix (1967–88).- "Rouse up O Young Men of the New Age!": Oe Kenzaburo and William Blake on bodies, biopolitics, and the imagination.