Popular Magazines and Fiction in Shanghai, 1914–1925

Popular Magazines and Fiction in Shanghai, 1914–1925

  • Peijie Mao
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing USAISBN 13: 9781978793859ISBN 10: 1978793855

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Popular Magazines and Fiction in Shanghai, 1914–1925 is written by Peijie Mao and published by Bloomsbury Publishing USA. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1978793855 (ISBN 10) and 9781978793859 (ISBN 13).

This book explores the rise of Shanghai-based popular magazines produced by the “Mandarin Ducks and Butterflies School” in early twentieth-century China. It examines the national, gender, family, and social imaginaries constructed and negotiated through a complex network of relationships between popular writers, magazine editors, and their intended readers, which were represented in various forms of popular narratives, including patriotic stories, war/military stories, family narratives, domestic fiction, utopian writings, and industrial-business stories. The author argues that the national imagination, social ideals, and the notions of ideal womanhood and the new family, were intrinsically linked and integral to the search for cultural identity of the emerging Chinese “middle society” and an expression of their collective sensibilities, experiences, and aspirations. This book suggests that the cultural imaginaries configurated in these magazine stories articulated a shared quest for modernity, one that emphasized sentiment, quotidian experience, the pursuit of the modern family and individual success, strengthening of the nation, and the reinvention of cultural tradition. Popular magazines and fiction, therefore, became uniquely instrumental in catalyzing the process of Chinese modernity, which emerged and developed along the symbiotic interrelations between the private and the public, the traditional and the modern, and the real and the imaginary.