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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Shih-Wen Chen , Professor Claudia NelsonPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.521kg ISBN: 9781409447351ISBN 10: 1409447359 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 15 April 2013 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsContents: A kaleidoscope of knowledge: children, knowledge, and China in Victorian and Edwardian Britain; Exploring the Celestial Kingdom: William Dalton and Anne Bowman’s vision of China; From comic trickster to brilliant detective: E. Harcourt Burrage’s ’immortal’ Ching-Ching; Heroes and hostile hordes: representing the Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864); China against the allies: interpreting the Boxer Uprising (1899-1901); Conclusion: quilts and kaleidoscopes: visions of China in the literary imagination; Appendix: timeline; Works cited; Index.Reviews'Shih-Wen Chen's extraordinary research challenges the assertions made by previous scholars to construct an important and convincing new analysis of Chinese characters in British children's fiction.'Sally Mitchell, Temple University, USA'Combining detailed historical context with close rhetorical analysis, Shih-Wen Chen brings out the subtle distinction and occluded histories that reveal the diverse and subtle ways images of China in the nineteenth century vary from the conventional reading of stereotype. Extensively researched, well argued, topical and expansive in its scope, her book provides a detailed and compelling case for the variegated lens British children's fiction offers for viewing the complexities and nuances of Sino-British relations'.Helen Groth, University of New South Wales, Australia 'Shih-Wen Chen's extraordinary research challenges the assertions made by previous scholars to construct an important and convincing new analysis of Chinese characters in British children's fiction.' Sally Mitchell, Temple University, USA 'Combining detailed historical context with close rhetorical analysis, Shih-Wen Chen brings out the subtle distinction and occluded histories that reveal the diverse and subtle ways images of China in the nineteenth century vary from the conventional reading of stereotype. Extensively researched, well argued, topical and expansive in its scope, her book provides a detailed and compelling case for the variegated lens British children's fiction offers for viewing the complexities and nuances of Sino-British relations'. Helen Groth, University of New South Wales, Australia 'While all scholars writing about imperialism and children's literature will find this an essential text, which will do much to counter simplistic readings and previously uncontested assumptions, I hope it will find a wider readership as well amongst anyone wishing for ""a peep into the wonders"" of how the Victorians imagined China.' New Zealand Journal of Asian Studies 'Chen's unique focus on China in Victorian and Edwardian children's books and the sources their authors employed, explicated in clear, engaging prose, makes her study a valuable addition to our understanding of children's fiction from this period, and a first purchase for academic libraries supporting courses in Victorian literature and children's literature.' Children's Literature Association Quarterly 'It offers a close description of rewardingly different texts, and takes into account how market trends, gender, and class influenced and shaped them.' Archiv fur das Studium der Neueren Sprachen und Literaturen '... the British Empire in China has been a neglected stepchild in colonial studies, receiving less scholarly attention than the Empire in India and in Africa. Chen's monograph helps to remedy this neglect, particularly with regard to British children's and young adult literature. ... the great strength of her study ... is her rich, wide-ranging, and fine-grained understanding of an impressive number of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century British fictional and nonfictional texts about China.' Victorian Studies "'Shih-Wen Chen's extraordinary research challenges the assertions made by previous scholars to construct an important and convincing new analysis of Chinese characters in British children's fiction.' Sally Mitchell, Temple University, USA 'Combining detailed historical context with close rhetorical analysis, Shih-Wen Chen brings out the subtle distinction and occluded histories that reveal the diverse and subtle ways images of China in the nineteenth century vary from the conventional reading of stereotype. Extensively researched, well argued, topical and expansive in its scope, her book provides a detailed and compelling case for the variegated lens British children's fiction offers for viewing the complexities and nuances of Sino-British relations'. Helen Groth, University of New South Wales, Australia 'While all scholars writing about imperialism and children's literature will find this an essential text, which will do much to counter simplistic readings and previously uncontested assumptions, I hope it will find a wider readership as well amongst anyone wishing for ""a peep into the wonders"" of how the Victorians imagined China.' New Zealand Journal of Asian Studies 'Chen's unique focus on China in Victorian and Edwardian children's books and the sources their authors employed, explicated in clear, engaging prose, makes her study a valuable addition to our understanding of children's fiction from this period, and a first purchase for academic libraries supporting courses in Victorian literature and children's literature.' Children's Literature Association Quarterly 'It offers a close description of rewardingly different texts, and takes into account how market trends, gender, and class influenced and shaped them.' Archiv fur das Studium der Neueren Sprachen und Literaturen '... the British Empire in China has been a neglected stepchild in colonial studies, receiving less scholarly attention than the Empire in India and in Africa. Chen's monograph helps to remedy this neglect, particularly with regard to British children's and young adult literature. ... the great strength of her study ... is her rich, wide-ranging, and fine-grained understanding of an impressive number of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century British fictional and nonfictional texts about China.' Victorian Studies" Author InformationShih-Wen Chen is Lecturer in Literary Studies at Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia. Her research interests include children’s literature, print culture, and histories of reading. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |