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Critical Connections: Forum on Cultural Studies in Asia and Beyond
16 March 2012, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand
CONFERENCE KEYNOTE SCHOLAR AND GUEST SPEAKER
Asst. Professor Dr. Winnie L.M. YEE (University of Hong Kong)
email: <yeelmw@hku.hk>
"Un-masking Shanghai: History, Memory and Cosomopolitics in Wang Anyi’s Moonstruck (Yuese liao ren, 2008)"
In the emergent society of consumption and under the sway of cosmopolitanism, Shanghai and her past are being dissolved into spectacles. Cultural production has demonstrated a decline to the immediate and the everyday, to consumption practices and personal pleasure. In opposition to this, writers like Wang Anyi strive to renew engagement with history and memory, endeavoring to understand the swift changes in social reality through revisiting the past. Previous scholarship on Wang probed occasionally the thematic implications of cosmopolitcs but has not engaged in systematic study of the relationship between local culture, memory, and the flow of migrant workers in the age of globalization. This paper aims to examine the notions of history and the body as the protagonists reconcile their estrangement in everyday life through recalling the memories that they have lost. It will also look closely at this work of Wang, for how it redefines contemporary Shanghai urbanites’ everyday experience through the issue of cosmopolitanism, and how the recovery of the past provides a critique of the materialistic culture of Shanghai and China. The aspects of local culture(s) and its resistant voices will also be highlighted.
Winnie L.M. YEE, Ph.D. (HKU) is an Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature. Her research interests include modern and contemporary Chinese literature and culture, Hong Kong cultural studies, postcolonial theories, eco-criticism, and diasporic memories. Her work has appeared in Tamkang Review. She is co-editor of Narrating Hong Kong Culture and Identity (Oxford UP, 2003) and has published on Hong Kong poetry, Yu Jian, Dung Kai-cheung, and Wong Bik-wan. She is currently working on the ecopolitics in contemporary Chinese literature |
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