Li-Chun Hsiao is professor at Waseda University in Tokyo.
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Description
Introduction Chapter One: "Speech after Long Silence": The 1956 Manifesto and the Obscure(d) Beginnings of a Cold War Modernism Chapter Two: A Double-edged Sword?: the Rise of the Soldier-Poets and Their Modernist Turn Chapter Three: Breaking Ground in Splendid Isolation: Death of a Stone Cell and Cold War Ethos Chapter Four: Two States of One Peculiar Modernism: From the US-Aided Literary Establishment to the Culture of US Aids Chapter Five: At Home in Exile: The Cold War Modernist, the Expatriate, and the Literature of Exile Bibliography About the Author
In this seminal study of Taiwan's literary modernism in the Cold War context, Li-Chun Hsiao probes into a number of unexamined assumptions about its rise and development and seeks to tease out a cultural politics and poetics of Cold War modernism in Taiwan mainly by addressing the "soldier-poets" and expatriate writers as a crossover point for a number of discursive practices whose origins are elsewhere: of Cold War ideology, US foreign policy, aesthetic doctrines and literary pedagogy, long-distance Chinese nationalism, among others. It is a superb work of scholarship, painstakingly researched, copiously documented, and gracefully written. -- Chun-san Wang, Asia University