🎉   Please check out our new website over at books-etc.com.

Seller
Your price
£20.94
RRP: £24.99
Save £4.05 (16%)
Dispatched within 2-3 working days.

Shadow Modernism

Photography, Writing, and Space in Shanghai, 1925-1937

By (author) William Schaefer
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Duke University Press, North Carolina, United States
Published: 29th Sep 2017
Dimensions: w 127mm h 319mm d 18mm
Weight: 525g
ISBN-10: 0822369192
ISBN-13: 9780822369196
Barcode No: 9780822369196
Trade or Institutional customer? Contact us about large order quotes.
Synopsis
During the early twentieth century, Shanghai was the center of China's new media culture. Described by the modernist writer Mu Shiying as "transplanted from Europe" and "paved with shadows," for many of its residents Shanghai was a city without a past paradoxically haunted by the absent past's traces. In Shadow Modernism William Schaefer traces how photographic practices in Shanghai provided a forum within which to debate culture, ethnicity, history, and the very nature of images. The central modernist form in China, photography was neither understood nor practiced as primarily a medium for realist representation; rather, photo layouts, shadow photography, and photomontage rearranged and recomposed time and space, cutting apart and stitching places, people, and periods together in novel and surreal ways. Analyzing unknown and overlooked photographs, photomontages, cartoons, paintings, and experimental fiction and poetry, Schaefer shows how artists and writers used such fragmentation and juxtaposition to make visible the shadows of modernity in Shanghai: the violence, the past, the ethnic and cultural multiplicity excluded and repressed by the prevailing cultural politics of the era and yet hidden in plain sight.

New & Used

Seller Information Condition Price
-New£20.94
+ FREE UK P & P

What Reviewers Are Saying

Submit your review
Newspapers & Magazines
"The book is smart and rigorously researched, and the prose is immaculate. By sticking close to his objects of study, no matter how ambiguous, difficult, and distant, Schaefer shows us how Shanghai's shadows strangely illuminate the cultural history of the city-and the practices of art history." -- Lisa Claypool * CAA Reviews *