“Worlds of Reading in China’s long 1970s: Reading and  Writing during the Cultural Revolution” analyzes intellectual processes  and practices during China’s long 1970s. It analyses popular fictional  and non-fictional texts between late 1968 and the early 1980s. Some of  these texts were published as part of the official publication system,  whereas others circulated unofficially or even illegally. The project  focuses on both the texts and the practices of their production,  circulation and consumption as well as on their respective impact on  contemporary readers and on later intellectual and literary  developments. The texts – especially those that circulated illegally  among the sent-down youth (as hand copied manuscripts, 文革手抄本, or as  copies meant for internal circulation) – are understood and analyzed  both as intellectual and material resource.
This project pursues  four aims. First, it aims at understanding concrete practices of reading  and their meaning(s). Second, it examines in how far these practices as  well as the respective texts continue earlier practices and texts and  anticipate later ones. Third, it analyses in how far fictional and  non-fictional texts allowed for new intellectual, social and personal  developments that are commonly associated with the reform period that  officially started after the Cultural Revolution. Fourth, this project  is situated within the larger discussion about China’s long 1970s. After  all, a closer scrutiny of the intellectual debates and the contents of  influential texts will reveal that breaks and ruptures in the transition  from revolution to reform are in fact less apparent than they appear to  be on first glance.
 
Reading Intellectual and Literary Change during China’s long 1970s
International Conference to be held in Freiburg: May 5-6, 2017    
 
Speakers  at this conference will be Timothy  Cheek (keynote), Peidong  Sun,  Lorenz Bichler, Puck Engman, Emily Graf,  Lena Henningsen, Rui  Kunze,  Damian Mandzunowski, Tabea Mühlbach,  Elisabeth Schleep, and  Oliver  Schulz. Discussants will be Daniel Leese, Barbara Mittler, Duncan   Paterson et al.
You can find the Conference Program here.
Please register with the conference organisers: oliver.schulz@sinologie.uni-freiburg.de or Lena.Henningsen@sinologie.uni-freiburg.de by Friday April 28. Registration is not required for the keynote-talk.
The  project has received generous funding from the Ministry of Science and  the Arts (Baden-Württemberg), from Freiburg University and from the Young Academy .
 
 