Book Talk: ๐๐ฆ๐ฏ๐ต๐ช๐ฎ๐ฆ๐ฏ๐ต๐ข๐ญ ๐๐ฆ๐ฑ๐ถ๐ฃ๐ญ๐ช๐ค ๐๐ฉ๐ช๐ฏ๐ฆ๐ด๐ฆ ๐๐ฏ๐ต๐ฆ๐ญ๐ญ๐ฆ๐ค๐ต๐ถ๐ข๐ญ๐ด ๐ข๐ฏ๐ฅ ๐ต๐ฉ๐ฆ ๐๐ข๐ฐ๐ช๐ด๐ต ๐๐ข๐ด๐ต
Speaker/Author: Hang Tu, Assistant Professor of Chinese Studies, National University of Singapore
Moderator: David Wang, Edward C. Henderson Professor of Chinese Literature, Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, Harvard University
Online via Zoom webinar. To join, register here.
About the book: How does emotion shape the landscape of public intellectual debate? In Sentimental Republic, Hang Tu proposes emotion as a new critical framework to approach a post-Mao cultural controversy. As it entered a period of market reform, China did not turn away from revolutionary sentiments. Rather, the post-Mao period experienced a surge of emotionally charged debates about red legacies, ranging from the anguished denunciations of Maoist violence to the elegiac remembrances of socialist egalitarianism.
Sentimental Republic chronicles forty years (1978โ2018) of bitter cultural wars about the Maoist past. It analyzes how the four major intellectual clusters in contemporary Chinaโliberals, the left, cultural conservatives, and nationalistsโdebated Maoโs revolutionary legacies in light of the postsocialist transition. Should the Chinese condemn revolutionary violence and โbid farewell to socialismโ? Or would a return to revolution foster alternative visions of Chinaโs future path? Tu probes the nexus of literature, thought, and memory, bringing to light the dynamic moral sentiments and emotional excess at work in these post-Mao ideological contentions. By analyzing how rival intellectual camps stirred up melancholy, guilt, anger, and resentment, Tu argues that the polemics surrounding the countryโs past cannot be properly understood without reading the emotional trajectories of the post-Mao intelligentsia.
Sponsored by the Harvard University Asia Center and the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies