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PUBLISHING INDUSTRY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   138591


Blanks to be filled: public-making and the censorship of Jia Pingwa’s decadent capital / Chen, Thomas   Article
Chen, Thomas Article
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Summary/Abstract Jia Pingwa’s Decadent Capital was wildly popular upon its publication in 1993. Offering plenty of sex and a bleak view of Chinese society under reform, it was also highly controversial, not least because of the blank squares strewn throughout the text to represent erotic descriptions edited out by the author. Commentators accused Jia of selling out high culture, much like the intellectuals portrayed in the narrative. The novel was banned in 1994 but rereleased in 2009 with one major change: the blank squares were replaced by ellipses. I argue that these blank squares not only make public censorship itself but also constitute the space of alternative publics, whether harking back to an elided past or projecting into a future yet to be written, that the post-Tiananmen Party-state tries to nullify. KEYWORDS: Jia Pingwa, censorship, publishing industry, postsocialism, dystopia, utopia, Tiananmen Square, public, criticism, Lu Xun.
Key Words Criticism  Utopia  Censorship  Public  Tiananmen Square  Postsocialism 
Publishing Industry  Public - Making  Jia Pingwa  Dystopia  Lu Xun 
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ID:   123489


Rural poets' publishing projects in a Tokugawa-period province / Moriyama, Takeshi   Journal Article
Moriyama, Takeshi Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract From the beginning of the eighteenth century, rural enthusiasts in the arts took part in production of printed materials, often with help from urban professionals and the publishing industry. Their works in print constitute concrete evidence of the diffusion of the arts from urban centres to the provinces during the Tokugawa period. Taking Echigo province as a case study, this essay explores provincial amateurs' publishing projects, particularly in haikai and Chinese poetry. Materials in this province show a steady development of cultural mechanisms that promoted provincial people's participation in book publishing and printmaking as an objective of their literary activities. This study provides evidence of interplay between the growing print culture and people's desire to publish their works in the context of the development of mass culture in Tokugawa society.
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