This book explores the cultural bridges connecting George Bernard Shaw and his contemporaries, such as Charles Dickens and Arthur Miller, to China. Analyzing readings, adaptations, and connections of Shaw in China through the lens of Chinese culture, Li details the negotiations between the focused and culturally specific standpoints of eastern and western culture while also investigating the simultaneously diffused, multi-focal, and comprehensive perspectives that create strategic moments that favor cross-cultural readings.
With sources ranging from Shaw's connections with his contemporaries in China to contemporary Chinese films and interpretations of Shaw in the digital space, Li relates the global impact of not only what Chinese lenses can reveal about Shaw's world, but how intercultural and interdisciplinary readings can shed new light on familiar and obscure works alike.
With sources ranging from Shaw's connections with his contemporaries in China to contemporary Chinese films and interpretations of Shaw in the digital space, Li relates the global impact of not only what Chinese lenses can reveal about Shaw's world, but how intercultural and interdisciplinary readings can shed new light on familiar and obscure works alike.
"The book offers illuminating looks at the Shaw plays most often performed and adapted by Chinese artists, and at the emphases and modifications by which directors and actors made the plays responsive to Chinese concerns. ... Li's book gives attention to prominent individuals with whom Shaw's long lifetime overlapped, especially those who influenced his writings or drew inspiration from them." (Mary Christian, English Literature in Transition 1880-1920, Vol. 63 (3), 2020)
"In this age of globalism and cross-cultural relations, Li has written a most timely and pertinent book. ... I enjoyed the book very much and recommend it to anyone interested in cross-cultural literary and cultural relations." (Matthew Yde, SHAW The Journal of Bernard Shaw Studies, Vol. 37 (2), 2017)
"In this age of globalism and cross-cultural relations, Li has written a most timely and pertinent book. ... I enjoyed the book very much and recommend it to anyone interested in cross-cultural literary and cultural relations." (Matthew Yde, SHAW The Journal of Bernard Shaw Studies, Vol. 37 (2), 2017)