
Chinese Serial
Cannibalizing Classics, Colonial Slaves, Sino-Noir, and Taiwan
Sheng-mei Ma(Author)
Bloomsbury Academic (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 10. December 2026
Book
Hardback
240 pages
979-8-216-45004-7 (ISBN)
Description
Chinese Serial explores a major trope in Chinese literature-cannibalism-from its origins in the 14th-century Chinese novel and Lu Xun's influential deployment in the early-20th century, to the sublimations of Chinese political history and East-West encounter in the many Detective Dee television serials.
Beginning with one of the four classical Chinese novels, Monkey, and extending to modern and contemporary Chinese literature and television series, the ten chapters, referred to as courses, form a "feast" that offers something for various readers. Additionally, it engages with Taiwanese history and cultural production-from Wu Zhuoliu's Orphan of Asia to Yang Shuang-zi's Taiwan Travelogue-presenting a dialectical account of its continuities with Chinese literary traditions as well as its unassimilability into those traditions.
This book is timely and probes into the centuries-long Chinese "man-eat-man" tradition. It spans the 16th-century classic chapter novel Monkey, the turn-of-the-last-century Lu Xun and Wu Zhuoliu, the surreal horror of Yu Hua and Fruit Chan, the oc/cult in Detective Dee, Asian North American self-Orientalizing, Taiwan's Nipponophilia, and finally the Sino-noir of serial killers in TV series.
Beginning with one of the four classical Chinese novels, Monkey, and extending to modern and contemporary Chinese literature and television series, the ten chapters, referred to as courses, form a "feast" that offers something for various readers. Additionally, it engages with Taiwanese history and cultural production-from Wu Zhuoliu's Orphan of Asia to Yang Shuang-zi's Taiwan Travelogue-presenting a dialectical account of its continuities with Chinese literary traditions as well as its unassimilability into those traditions.
This book is timely and probes into the centuries-long Chinese "man-eat-man" tradition. It spans the 16th-century classic chapter novel Monkey, the turn-of-the-last-century Lu Xun and Wu Zhuoliu, the surreal horror of Yu Hua and Fruit Chan, the oc/cult in Detective Dee, Asian North American self-Orientalizing, Taiwan's Nipponophilia, and finally the Sino-noir of serial killers in TV series.
Reviews / Votes
Chinese Serial is an intellectually critical study that rethinks Chinese literary and media traditions through the lens of seriality and consumption. Erudite, original, and unsettling in the best sense, it laid out new dining tables/set up an interesting dinner set for dinner conversations around Sinophone literary, media, and cultural studies. * Melody Yunzi Li, Associate Professor, University of Houston, USA *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
Illustrations
38 bw illus
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
979-8-216-45004-7 (9798216450047)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Sheng-mei Ma is Professor of English at Michigan State University in Michigan, USA, specializing in Asian Diaspora culture and East-West comparative studies. He is the author of over a dozen books, including Cultural Bifocals (2025); China Pop! (2024); The Tao of S (2022); Off-White (Bloomsbury, 2020); Sinophone-Anglophone Cultural Duet (2017); The Last Isle (Bloomsbury, 2015); Alienglish (2014); Asian Diaspora and East-West Modernity (2012); Diaspora Literature and Visual Culture (2011); East-West Montage (2007); The Deathly Embrace (2000); Immigrant Subjectivities in Asian American and Asian Diaspora Literatures (1998). Co-editor of five books and special issues, Transnational Narratives (2018) and Doing English in Asia (2016) among them, he also published a collection of poetry in Chinese, Thirty Left and Right.
Content
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgement
Appetizer
1. The First Course: Mythical Monkey: Eat People or Oneself, Spill Blood or Light
2. The Second Course: Lu Xun: Socialist Superman, Dangling Sick Man
3. The Third Course: The Orphan Teared Up; Surreal Horror Tore Up
4. The Fourth Course: The Oc/cult in Dee: Di Gong, Van Gulik, Tsui Hark, Chinese TV
5. The Fifth Course: Master-Slave Bond/age in China's Wuxia with Eunuchs
6. The Sixth Course: Stigma/ta: Eyes Slant like Chinks of Christ, or Chin-Kee of American Born Chinese
7. The Seventh Course: Bao and Turning Red: Eating Chinese in Bloody Toronto
8. The Eighth Course: Get Out of the Village: Watching The Prisoner with Chinese Subtitles in Juancun
9. The Ninth Course: Colonial "Shina Swine"; Millennial Taiwan's Nipponophile
10. The Tenth Course: Sino-Noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments
The Dessert of Taiwan
Bibliography
Endnotes
Index
Acknowledgement
Appetizer
1. The First Course: Mythical Monkey: Eat People or Oneself, Spill Blood or Light
2. The Second Course: Lu Xun: Socialist Superman, Dangling Sick Man
3. The Third Course: The Orphan Teared Up; Surreal Horror Tore Up
4. The Fourth Course: The Oc/cult in Dee: Di Gong, Van Gulik, Tsui Hark, Chinese TV
5. The Fifth Course: Master-Slave Bond/age in China's Wuxia with Eunuchs
6. The Sixth Course: Stigma/ta: Eyes Slant like Chinks of Christ, or Chin-Kee of American Born Chinese
7. The Seventh Course: Bao and Turning Red: Eating Chinese in Bloody Toronto
8. The Eighth Course: Get Out of the Village: Watching The Prisoner with Chinese Subtitles in Juancun
9. The Ninth Course: Colonial "Shina Swine"; Millennial Taiwan's Nipponophile
10. The Tenth Course: Sino-Noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments
The Dessert of Taiwan
Bibliography
Endnotes
Index