Synopses & Reviews
Poshek Fu’s fine study of the experiences of Chinese writers in Japanese-occupied Shanghai, the first of its kind, is an important and welcome contribution. . . . It is meticulously researched and convincingly argued. His discussion of the economic, political, social, and ethical quandaries of life in wartime is masterful, and he evokes vividly the minefield of private and public morality through which intellectuals somehow had to pick their way.”China Review InternationalThe story of occupied China remains largely untold, particularly in Western scholarly literature. . . . Poshek Fu’s study is a major step forward in our understanding of this complex era.”Pacific AffairsThis study will be warmly welcomed by scholars who want to know about Shanghai during the occupation, but I strongly suspect it will also be read closely by those interested in the general problem of moral choices under oppressive conditions. . . . This insightful work provides us with a framework that can be used to explain the complex (and very human) moral behavior of intellectuals in these settings.”Journal of Asian StudiesThis provocative, beautifully written book should be of interest not only to China specialists but to a broad spectrum of scholars interested in questions of intellectual culture, moral choice, and the dilemmas of surviving under foreign occupation.”Canadian Journal of History
Review
"The story of occupied China remains largely untold, particularly in Western scholarly literature. . . . Poshek Fu's study is a major step forward in our understanding of this complex era."Pacific Affairs
Review
"This study will be warmly welcomed by scholars who want to know about Shanghai during the occupation, but I strongly suspect it will also be read closely by those interested in the general problem of moral choices under oppressive conditions. . . . This insightful work provides us with a framework that can be used to explain the complex (and very human) moral behavior of intellectuals in these settings."Journal of Asian Studies
Review
"This provocative, beautifully written book should be of interest not only to China specialists but to a broad spectrum of scholars interested in questions of intellectual culture, moral choice, and the dilemmas of surviving under foreign occupation."Canadian Journal of History
Synopsis
Focusing on the intellectual life of Shanghai under Japanese occupation, the author shows that Shanghai writers exhibited a complexity and ambiguity of moral choices that challenges the postwar perception of occupied China as a field of conflict between selfless resisters and shameless collaborators. Illus.
Synopsis
“Poshek Fus fine study of the experiences of Chinese writers in Japanese-occupied Shanghai, the first of its kind, is an important and welcome contribution. . . . It is meticulously researched and convincingly argued. His discussion of the economic, political, social, and ethical quandaries of life in wartime is masterful, and he evokes vividly the minefield of private and public morality through which intellectuals somehow had to pick their way.”—China Review International
“The story of occupied China remains largely untold, particularly in Western scholarly literature. . . . Poshek Fus study is a major step forward in our understanding of this complex era.”—Pacific Affairs
Synopsis
Focusing on the intellectual life of Shanghai under occupation, Fu describes Chinese responses to the Japanese occupation of 1937-45.
Synopsis
Focusing on the responses of writers in Shanghai to the Japanese occupation, this book corrects the postwar conception of occupied China as a field of conflict between selfless resisters and shameless collaborators by showing a complexity and ambiguity of moral choices that defies such stereotyping.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [221]-240) and index.
Table of Contents
Preface; Abbreviations; Prologue: toward occupation; 1. Passivity: Wang Tongzhao and the ideal of resistance enlightenment; 2. Resistance: Li Jianwu and the theater of commitment; 3. Collaboration: the 'Gujin Group' and the literature of anachronism; Epilogue; Notes; Bibliography; Glossary; Index.