Commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of New York and Shanghai since the 1980s

This dissertation provides a close textual analysis of a selective number of New York and Shanghai novels published since the 1980s. It focuses on the formal and thematic features of these novels through comparative analyses of the themes of commodification and crime. Part I draws on the work of Jay...

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Main Author: Cai, Jiaying
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2012
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14486/
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author Cai, Jiaying
author_facet Cai, Jiaying
author_sort Cai, Jiaying
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This dissertation provides a close textual analysis of a selective number of New York and Shanghai novels published since the 1980s. It focuses on the formal and thematic features of these novels through comparative analyses of the themes of commodification and crime. Part I draws on the work of Jay McInerney, Bret Easton Ellis, Candace Bushnell, Wei Hui and Wang Anyi. It examines how commodification has become not just a feature of global fiction but how writers are drawn to a narrative of excess in their representations of it. Wei Hui's "body writing" shares the same materialistic emphasis as New York "Brat Pack" writing but in their criticism of material excess, their approaches are different. The markets in which these writers and their novels circulate also show how commodification can take control of their reception and lead to different interpretations and misinterpretations. Part II of the dissertation draws on the work of Qiu Xiaolong and Linda Fairstein. Through a close analysis of the representation of time and space, this part argues that both authors' deployment of time and space serves as a strategy to reveal the different social contexts that form the latent causes of individual crimes. By introducing a comparative analysis, this dissertation demonstrates that the shared themes of commodification and crime need to be contextualized within the two cities in order to understand the varied manifestations of the ongoing process of urbanization and its consequences for the literatures and cultures of New York and Shanghai.
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spelling nottingham-144862025-02-28T11:31:10Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14486/ Commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of New York and Shanghai since the 1980s Cai, Jiaying This dissertation provides a close textual analysis of a selective number of New York and Shanghai novels published since the 1980s. It focuses on the formal and thematic features of these novels through comparative analyses of the themes of commodification and crime. Part I draws on the work of Jay McInerney, Bret Easton Ellis, Candace Bushnell, Wei Hui and Wang Anyi. It examines how commodification has become not just a feature of global fiction but how writers are drawn to a narrative of excess in their representations of it. Wei Hui's "body writing" shares the same materialistic emphasis as New York "Brat Pack" writing but in their criticism of material excess, their approaches are different. The markets in which these writers and their novels circulate also show how commodification can take control of their reception and lead to different interpretations and misinterpretations. Part II of the dissertation draws on the work of Qiu Xiaolong and Linda Fairstein. Through a close analysis of the representation of time and space, this part argues that both authors' deployment of time and space serves as a strategy to reveal the different social contexts that form the latent causes of individual crimes. By introducing a comparative analysis, this dissertation demonstrates that the shared themes of commodification and crime need to be contextualized within the two cities in order to understand the varied manifestations of the ongoing process of urbanization and its consequences for the literatures and cultures of New York and Shanghai. 2012-03-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14486/1/576654.pdf Cai, Jiaying (2012) Commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of New York and Shanghai since the 1980s. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Cai, Jiaying
Commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of New York and Shanghai since the 1980s
title Commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of New York and Shanghai since the 1980s
title_full Commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of New York and Shanghai since the 1980s
title_fullStr Commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of New York and Shanghai since the 1980s
title_full_unstemmed Commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of New York and Shanghai since the 1980s
title_short Commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of New York and Shanghai since the 1980s
title_sort commodification and crime: a comparison of literary representations of new york and shanghai since the 1980s
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14486/