Speaking to History
豆瓣
The Story of King Goujian in Twentieth-Century China
Paul A. Cohen
简介
The ancient story of King Goujian, a psychologically complex fifth-century BCE monarch, spoke powerfully to the Chinese during China's turbulent twentieth century. Yet most Americanseven students and specialists of this erahave never heard of Goujian. In Speaking to History, Paul A. Cohen opens this previously missing (to the West) chapter of China's recent history. He connects the story to each of the major traumas of the last century, tracing its versatility as a source of inspiration and hope and elegantly exploring, on a more general level, why such stories often remain sealed up within a culture, unknown to outsiders. Labeling this phenomenon "insider cultural knowledge," Cohen investigates the relationship between past story and present reality. He inquires why at certain moments in their collective lives peoples are especially drawn to narratives from the distant past that resonate strongly with their current circumstances, and why the Chinese have returned over and over to a story from twenty-five centuries ago. In this imaginative stitching of story to history, Cohen reveals how the shared narratives of a community help to define its culture and illuminate its history.
contents
list of illustrations ix
foreword xi
preface xvii
acknowledgments xxiii
1. The Goujian Story in Antiquity 1
2. The Burden of National Humiliation: Late Qing
and Republican Years 36
3. The Plight of Chiang Kai-shek’s Taiwan 87
4. Crisis and Response: The Woxin changdan Fever
of the Early 1960s 136
5. Political Allegory in the 1980s: Xiao Jun and Bai Hua 177
6. The Goujian Story in a Privatizing China 203
Conclusion: Cross-Cultural Perspectives 228
notes 241
character list 289
bibliography 303
index 339