Affective Betrayal : Mind, Music, and Embodied Action in Late Qing China
by
Jean Tsui
Book Details
Format
Paperback / Softback
Book Series
SUNY series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture
ISBN-10
1438498799
ISBN-13
9781438498799
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Imprint
State University of New York Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Mar 2nd, 2025
Print length
342 Pages
Weight
476 grams
Ksh 5,200.00
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Seeks to introduce an "affective turn" to the study of China''s political modernization process.
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 (18731929) 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.
At the turn of the twentieth century, China''s leading reformer Liang Qichao (18731929) 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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