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The Self-deconstruction Of Scar Literature

Posted on:2010-09-08Degree:MasterType:Thesis
Country:ChinaCandidate:L DingFull Text:PDF
GTID:2155360275993679Subject:Literature and art
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Scar Literature is the beginning of the literature in the New Period, the literary trends first appeared after the "Cultural Revolution". It was derived from 'The Cultural Revolution Literature' which characterized by strong political themes and single mode, therefore, Scar Literature starts with a deep "Cultural Revolution" model. The Author - intellectuals describe the real situation of the era difficultly due to limitations of their own and the history.With the continuous development of Scar Literature, A large number of literary productions appear, Literature has begun to "turn inward", author gradually dilute the political theme, and focus on the character images and enrich the stories. Scar Man is the typical image in Scar Literature. This kind of characters truly reflect the situations when people in face of the disasters during the dark period of the history., also the embarrassment of the individuals survived in the New Period, they epitomizes the dilemma of our nation and the people. Scar Literature is struggling to move forward in accordance with the Jaws of development of the art world, though it is still lack of reflection intensity.When Scar Literature developed in the mature stage, it is emerging from the restrictions of socio-political and cultural systems gradually and achieving literature autonomy. In this period, Scar Literature reached to the highest point of its development, completed the self-deconstruction and go into the next stage. Scar Literature's mission is to change the political-literature relationship which it was derived from. So Scar Literature completes the mission only by the self-deconstruction.In order to evaluate the meanings and limitations exactly, we should place it in the relevant political environment of the social history.
Keywords/Search Tags:"scar literature", self-deconstruction, scar figure, literature autonomy
PDF Full Text Request
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