War and Popular Culture |
Abbreviations |
Acknowledgments |
Introduction |
![]() | 1— The Rise of Modern Popular Culture |
• | Treaty Ports and Shanghai |
• | A New Drama in Urban China |
• | The Emergence of Chinese Cartoons |
• | The New Press and New Journalists |
![]() | 2— Spoken Dramas |
• | Popularization |
• | The Street Play Lay Down Your Whip |
• | Female Symbols of Resistance: Patriotic Courtesans and Women Warriors |
• | Historical Plays |
• | Traditional Dramas |
![]() | 3— Cartoons |
• | The National Salvation Cartoon Propaganda Corps |
• | Images of War |
• | A New Form of Art |
• | War and Peace in the Cartoons of Feng Zikai |
![]() | 4— Newspapers |
• | Wartime Dispatches |
• | Fan Changjiang and the Rhetoric of War |
• | The War Correspondent |
• | The Journalist as Critic |
• | Dissemination and Decentralization |
• | Local Newspapers |
![]() | 5— New Wine in Old Bottles |
• | The Use of Popular Literature |
• | Lao She and Lao Xiang |
• | Drum Singing and Other Popular Culture Forms |
• | Popular Reading Materials |
![]() | 6— Popular Culture in the Communist Areas |
• | The Village Drama Movement |
• | Art for Politics' Sake |
• | Newspapers and a New Language |
• | Creating a New Society |
• | The Border Region Culture |
![]() | 7— A New Political Culture |
• | Intellectuals and Participation |
• | The Dissemination of Urban Popular Culture Forms |
• | Village Culture |
Appendix: Persons Interviewed |
![]() | Notes |
• | Introduction |
• | 1— The Rise of Modern Popular Culture |
• | 2— Spoken Dramas |
• | 3— Cartoons |
• | 4— Newspapers |
• | 5— New Wine in Old Bottles |
• | 6— Popular Culture in the Communist Areas |
• | 7— A New Political Culture |
![]() | Glossary |
• | A |
![]() | Bibliography |
• | Newspapers and Periodicals |
• | Books and Articles |
![]() | Index |
• | A |
• | B |
• | C |
• | D |
• | E |
• | F |
• | G |
• | H |
• | I |
• | J |
• | K |
• | L |
• | M |
• | N |
• | O |
• | P |
• | Q |
• | R |
• | S |
• | T |
• | U |
• | V |
• | W |
• | X |
• | Y |
• | Z |