Pan-Asian Poetics: Tagore and the Interpersonal in May Fourth New Poetry

Rabindranath Tagore's visit to China in 1924 was a milestone in the May Fourth Movement's envisioning of modern literature as a vehicle for social transformation. Moving beyond interpretations of the visit as a political failure, this article locates the reception of Tagore's ideal of...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of Asian studies 2018-02, Vol.77 (1), p.181-203
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description Rabindranath Tagore's visit to China in 1924 was a milestone in the May Fourth Movement's envisioning of modern literature as a vehicle for social transformation. Moving beyond interpretations of the visit as a political failure, this article locates the reception of Tagore's ideal of Eastern spirituality within the larger climate of literary production, specifically in new poetry. Through close reading of poems by Xu Zhimo and Bing Xin, this article argues that Tagore's ideas were fundamental for the development of poetry as an interpersonal medium that both portrays and effects social bonds. This understanding developed as Chinese poets and literary critics engaged with Tagore's critique of Western materialism and his positioning of Asian religious sensibilities in contrast to Western materialism. Tagore's view promoted literature as a medium connecting religion, the individual, and the universe. In this sense, though Tagore's pan-Asianism failed as a viable political project, it carried powerful resonance in the arena of modern Chinese literature.
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subjects 19th century
Asian literature
Asian studies
Attachment
British & Irish literature
Chinese languages
Christianity
French literature
Indian literature
Irish literature
Literary criticism
Literature
Materialism
Nobel prizes
Poetics
Poetry
Poets
Politics
Religion
Rolland, Romain (1866-1944)
Spirituality
Tagore, Rabindranath (1861-1941)
Transformation
Translations
Yeats, William Butler (1865-1939)
title Pan-Asian Poetics: Tagore and the Interpersonal in May Fourth New Poetry
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