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(Re-)Reading Shanghai’s Futures in Ruins: Through the Legend of an (Extra-)Ordinary Woman in The Song of Everlasting Sorrow: A Novel of Shanghai
Author(s) -
Ian Fong
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
culture unbound
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2000-1525
DOI - 10.3384/cu.2000.1525.124248
Subject(s) - sorrow , futures contract , reading (process) , legend , relation (database) , literature , china , history , art , philosophy , linguistics , computer science , archaeology , database , financial economics , economics
This essay is an allegorical reading of Shanghai futures through a fictive woman, Wang Qiyao, in Wang Anyi’s novel, The Song of Everlasting Sorrow: A Novel of Shanghai (1996). The novel is about her life in China from the 1940s to the 1980s. Using Benjamin’s critique of 19th century Paris in relation to Shanghai in the 1930s and 1940s (“the Paris of the Orient”) the essay examines questions of phantasmagoria, nostalgia, memory and awakening and relates these to the possible Shanghai futures to come

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