Posts Tagged: Chinese Literature

Lu Xun – Wild Grass – Interview with Professor Roy Chan

Today, we interview Professor Roy Chan. Professor Chan is not only one of the most interesting thinkers trying to tackle Lu Xun in the American academia, but he is also the mentor of both Lee and Rob. Professor Chan is the author of The Edge of Knowing, an exploration dreams in the work of Lu […]

Lu Xun – A Minor Incident – Interview with Alec Ash

On Today’s podcast, we have one of the best writers on contemporary Chinese youth, Alec Ash. Alec wrote an excellent book on Chinese young adults called Wish Lanterns. It was renamed China’s New Youth for the American book market. Alec joins us today on the podcast to talk about one of Lu Xun’s shortest stories. We debate how close […]

Lu Xun – Medicine – Interview with Dean James Carter

Blood and Bread.  A national reckoning between two mourning mothers. Today, Rob and Lee interview Professor James Carter, Dean of the History Department at Saint Joseph’s University. The story that the three discuss is Lu Xun’s story “Medicine.”  Professor Carter’s most recent book is Champions Day, a book about the last gasp of old Shanghai.  

Nixon in China – The Opera

Today, we are interrupting our podcast series on Lu Xun to celebrate the  anniversary of Nixon’s earth-shattering visit to Beijing 50 years ago this week. In this episode, we take a look at the John Adams Opera, Nixon in China, tackling how the opera incorportates elements of Chinese Cultural Revolution opera and how some of […]

Lu Xun – True Story of Ah Q – Lu Xun Series #6

This week’s podcast is on one of the most important stories in modern Chinese literature, Lu Xun’s True Story of Ah Q (鲁迅 – 阿Q正传). Rob and Lee attempt to tackle the story that changed China and still echos down to the present. 

Kong Yiji – Lu Xun Series #5

Today, we have author, translator and teacher, Professor Bryan Van Norden, on the podcast to discuss Lu Xun’s short but fascinating story of Kong Yiji (鲁迅 – 孔乙己), the book-stealing scholar who Lu Xun imagined to be the symbol of the true state of China’s elite culture. Professor Van Norden, Rob and Lee walk through […]

Preface to War Cry – Interview with Professor Roy Chan

In Episode 3 in our Lu Xun Series, we interview one of the experts in the field of Lu Xun studies (and advisor to both Rob and Lee) about the Preface to Lu Xun’s most important collection of short stories War Cry (Nahan). This preface has been the subject of numerous debates in China and in […]

Lu Xun’s Early Career – Lu Xun Series – Episode 1

This is the first episode in our series on Lu Xun, and, for this episode, we are going to look at some of the earliest aspects of Lu Xun’s career, both his time growing up in Shaoxing, his time in Japan and his attempts to become a translator.