"It is high time we had a book-length study on Liang Qichao that truly breaks new ground. Armed with an original conceptual framework as well as an effective analytic apparatus that focuses on the central role of emotion in Liang's political theory, Jean Tsui assiduously tracks the spoor of this towering figure's complex thought throughout the intellectual terrain of the late Qing and early Republic." — On-cho Ng, Penn State University<br /><br />"This book brings new light to the rich scholarship on Liang Qichao and Chinese political modernity. In its discovery of an 'affective turn' in modern Chinese political philosophy, it offers a non-Western alternative to the ongoing debates on affect and politics in our global situation." — Pu Wang, Brandeis University

Affective Betrayal uses "affect" as an analytical category to explicate the fragility and fragmentation of Chinese political modernity. In so doing, the book uncovers some of the unresolved moral and philosophical obstacles China encountered in the past, as well as the cultural predicament the country faces at present.At the turn of the twentieth century, China's leading reformer Liang Qichao (1873–1929) presented modern political knowledge in musical and visual representational formats that were designed to stimulate readers' bodily senses. By expanding the reception of textual knowledge from "reading" to "listening" and "visualizing experiences," Liang generated an epistemic shift, and perhaps an all-inclusive internal intellectual, philosophical, and moral transition, alongside China's modern political reform. By tracing the marginalized academic and philosophical positions Liang sought to restore in China's incipient democratic movement, Affective Betrayal examines how his attempts to conjoin Confucian morality and liberal democracy expose hidden anxieties as well as inherent contradictions between these two systems of thought. These conflicts, besides disrupting the stability of China's burgeoning modern political order, explain why the import of modern concepts led to China's continued political impasse, rather than rationality and progress, after the 1911 revolution.
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Seeks to introduce an "affective turn" to the study of China's political modernization process.
AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: An Affective Turn in the Study of Chinese Political Modernity1. Repairing the Human, Restoring Their Heartmind2. Reclaiming Qing Philology to Recover the Innate Moral Order3. To Know Is to Act: The Realization of Cosmic-Moral-Political Oneness in Action4. Dissolution of Modern Political Languages in the Cinematic Spectacle5. Musicality —Representing the Rhythm of Political Revolution and the Tenor of Its Moral DiscontentPostscript: Let Us Be Taken by Affect, and to Be Taken Away and AfarNotesBibliographyIndex
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"It is high time we had a book-length study on Liang Qichao that truly breaks new ground. Armed with an original conceptual framework as well as an effective analytic apparatus that focuses on the central role of emotion in Liang's political theory, Jean Tsui assiduously tracks the spoor of this towering figure's complex thought throughout the intellectual terrain of the late Qing and early Republic." — On-cho Ng, Penn State University"This book brings new light to the rich scholarship on Liang Qichao and Chinese political modernity. In its discovery of an 'affective turn' in modern Chinese political philosophy, it offers a non-Western alternative to the ongoing debates on affect and politics in our global situation." — Pu Wang, Brandeis University
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781438498782
Publisert
2024-09-01
Utgiver
Vendor
State University of New York Press
Vekt
227 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
342

Forfatter

Biographical note

Jean Tsui is Associate Professor of Chinese Literature in the Department of World Languages and Literatures at the College of Staten Island, the City University of New York.