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From The Female Discourse To The Main-trend Ideology

Posted on:2004-07-17Degree:MasterType:Thesis
Country:ChinaCandidate:Z H DengFull Text:PDF
GTID:2155360122461162Subject:Chinese Modern and Contemporary Literature
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Ding-ling's novel writing has a great chang which can be actively described as the transform from female discourse to the main-trend ideology viewed in the aspect of novel narraton. There is a clear female awareness in Ding-ling's early writings which is symbolized as the female discourse in novel narration .Ding-ling pushes the modern female writtings to a new level by expressing femal awareness and writings of femal discouse .However, she chose her literature road to the mass instead of singing a personal femal literature songs .Her novel narration transforms from the description of female's feeling about the depressing and vanishing of love to describing the course of the awakening and struggling of the people---workers and farmers.Veiled under the transform breflected the inner conflict between the politicol recongnition the ideological requsition and the writer's art personality. During the war , novel narration showed the hard and twisted process of the combing of the political recognition on culture and ideology in Yan'an .Finally Ding-ling accepts and follows the "direction of workers and farmers" which was established by Mao zedong in the Speech in 1942. Meanwhile ,her novel narration expresses the main-trend ideology and builds a new narration form of Realism.The transform from a liberalism writer who mainly writes modern femal awareness to a revolutionary writer who pursues the most effective political function can be regarded as an important step in modern Chinese literature. In this sense , the transform is not only a simple phenomenon but a historical question. "It stands for a literatrue phenomenon and shows the hard and twisted development of modern Chinese literature.
Keywords/Search Tags:Ding-ling's novels, Narrative changes, Female discourse, Ideology, Literature of the mass, Realism
PDF Full Text Request
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