Untitled

dc.contributor.authorJeffrey Matheren_US
dc.date.accessioned2016-04-26T05:54:45Z
dc.date.available2016-04-26T05:54:45Z
dc.date.issued2016-03-??
dc.description.abstractA Chinese Life is a graphic autobiography first published in France as Une vie chinoise in three separate volumes between 2009 and 2011. With a single volume English translation appearing in 2012, the work has reached a global audience and speaks to a growing interest in the graphic narrative form as a mode through which comics artists are able to explore questions of identity, politics, and memory. Documenting the life of a Communist Party member who faces severe personal adversity and struggles to maintain his faith in Party ideals, A Chinese Life is a work that addresses issues of history and memory on both personal and political levels. The result is a provocative, sometimes unsatisfying, account that speaks to larger underlying problems of cultural memory and narrating Chinese history, particularly as this history is translated and negotiated across national and political borders.en_US
dc.identifier4614CCC6-8B24-700F-6EA4-ABBA98C2F09E
dc.identifier.urihttp://rportal.lib.ntnu.edu.tw/handle/20.500.12235/77611
dc.language英文
dc.publisher英語學系zh_tw
dc.publisherDepartment of English, NTNUen_US
dc.relation42(1),99-118
dc.relation.ispartof同心圓:文學與文化研究zh_tw
dc.subject.othergraphic autobiographyen_US
dc.subject.otherpropaganda and memoryen_US
dc.subject.othermemory studiesen_US
dc.subject.othercollaborative autobiographyen_US
dc.subject.otherA Chinese Lifeen_US
dc.title.alternativePropaganda and Memory in Li Kunwu and Philippe Ôtié’s A Chinese Lifezh_tw

Files