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dc.contributor.authorZhang, Chunjiede
dc.date.accessioned2022-02-11T10:12:25Z
dc.date.available2022-02-11T10:12:25Z
dc.date.issued2021de
dc.identifier.issn1612-6041de
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/77319
dc.description.abstractIn 1892, the year the American writer Pearl S. Buck was born, the US Congress renewed the Chinese Exclusion Act, initially passed in 1882, for another ten years. It sought to prevent all laborers of Chinese ethnicity from entering or reentering the US, with breaches punishable by law. Three months after her birth, Buck moved with her missionary parents to China and spent most of her life until her early forties there. During the global Cold War, Buck, already a Nobel Laureate (1938), sharply criticized US foreign policy and its racism, the ignorance of American diplomats about China, and the arrogant belief in solving conflicts in Asia through military means in her book Friend to Friend (1958). While there is little doubt about Buck’s official US nationality, her cultural belonging of choice - which decisively shaped her lifelong literary writing, in particular the novel The Good Earth (1931) that earned her the Nobel Prize - is inherently multivalent. In The Good Earth, Buck depicts the lives of Chinese peasants and their loyalty to the earth that nurtures humanity and provides all that lives on it with nutrition. In the following pages, I will discuss Buck’s bicultural biography and several aspects of this extremely popular and influential novel and, rather than viewing it as a piece of classic American literature, I will propose re-reading it as a work in the Chinese tradition of literary realism and in the context of the emerging trend of rural realism in the early twentieth century. The purpose of my re-reading of The Good Earth is to highlight less apparent global connections in the tradition of rural nostalgia and to complicate the paradigm of national literature and national history. Indeed, the earth, ruralism, nutrition, and food, as the novel describes, constitute the very foundation of human existence across borders, political camps, language barriers, and cultural differences from antiquity to the present day.de
dc.languageende
dc.subject.ddcGeschichtede
dc.subject.ddcHistoryen
dc.titleChinese Rural Realism: Rereading Pearl S. Buck's The Good Earth (1931)de
dc.description.reviewbegutachtet (peer reviewed)de
dc.description.reviewpeer revieweden
dc.source.journalZeithistorische Forschungen / Studies in Contemporary History
dc.source.volume18de
dc.publisher.countryDEUde
dc.source.issue2de
dc.subject.classozallgemeine Geschichtede
dc.subject.classozGeneral Historyen
dc.rights.licenceCreative Commons - Namensnennung, Weitergabe unter gleichen Bedingungen 4.0de
dc.rights.licenceCreative Commons - Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0en
internal.statusformal und inhaltlich fertig erschlossende
dc.type.stockrecensionde
dc.type.documentRezensionde
dc.type.documentreviewen
dc.source.pageinfo363-370de
internal.identifier.classoz30301
internal.identifier.journal1328
internal.identifier.document23
dc.source.recensionauthorBuck, Pearl S.de
dc.source.recensiondateissued2012de
dc.source.recensiontitleThe Good Earthde
dc.source.recensioncityNew Yorkde
dc.source.recensionpublisherWashington Square Pressde
dc.source.recensionisbn9781476733043de
internal.identifier.ddc900
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.14765/zzf.dok-2336de
dc.description.pubstatusVeröffentlichungsversionde
dc.description.pubstatusPublished Versionen
internal.identifier.licence24
internal.identifier.pubstatus1
internal.identifier.review1
ssoar.urn.registrationfalsede


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