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When true love came to China /Lynn Pan.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Hong Kong : Hong Kong University Press, (c)2015.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789888313426
  • 9888313428
Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • DS779 .W446 2015
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
2. Confucius and Freud -- 3. Love in the western world -- 4. Keywords -- 5. Two great works on love -- 6. The Camellia lady -- 7. Joan Haste and romantic fiction -- 8. The clump -- 9. Two ways of escape -- 10. Faust, Werther, Salome -- 11. Ellen Key -- 12. One and only -- 13. Looking for love : Yu Dafu -- 14. Exalting love : Xu Zhimo -- 15. Love betrayed : Eileen Chang -- 16. Love's decline and fall -- 17. Afterthoughts.
Subject: Most people suppose that the whole world knows what it is to love; that romantic love is universal, quintessentially human. Such a supposition has to be able to meet three challenges. It has to justify its underlying assumption that all cultures mean the same thing by the word 'love' regardless of language. It has to engage with the scholarly debate on whether or not romantic love was invented in Europe and is uniquely Western. And it must be able to explain why early twentieth-century Chinese writers claimed that they had never known true love, or love by modern Western standards. By addressing these three challenges through a literary, historical, philosophical, biographical, and above all comparative approach, this highly original work shows how love's profile in China shifted with the rejection of arranged marriages and concubinage in favor of free individual choice, monogamy and a Western model of romantic love.
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Includes bibliographies and index.

1. Love's entrée -- 2. Confucius and Freud -- 3. Love in the western world -- 4. Keywords -- 5. Two great works on love -- 6. The Camellia lady -- 7. Joan Haste and romantic fiction -- 8. The clump -- 9. Two ways of escape -- 10. Faust, Werther, Salome -- 11. Ellen Key -- 12. One and only -- 13. Looking for love : Yu Dafu -- 14. Exalting love : Xu Zhimo -- 15. Love betrayed : Eileen Chang -- 16. Love's decline and fall -- 17. Afterthoughts.

Most people suppose that the whole world knows what it is to love; that romantic love is universal, quintessentially human. Such a supposition has to be able to meet three challenges. It has to justify its underlying assumption that all cultures mean the same thing by the word 'love' regardless of language. It has to engage with the scholarly debate on whether or not romantic love was invented in Europe and is uniquely Western. And it must be able to explain why early twentieth-century Chinese writers claimed that they had never known true love, or love by modern Western standards. By addressing these three challenges through a literary, historical, philosophical, biographical, and above all comparative approach, this highly original work shows how love's profile in China shifted with the rejection of arranged marriages and concubinage in favor of free individual choice, monogamy and a Western model of romantic love.

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