Reclaiming rubbish: feiwu at the intersections of gender, class and disability in Xiao Hong's Market Street and Field of Life and Death

This article revisits Xiao Hong’s Field of Life and Death (Shengsi chang 生死場, 1935) and Market Street (Shangshi jie商市街, 1936) against sources from the periodical press to explore how Xiao Hong’s works speak back to discourses on “rubbish” (feiwu 廢物), a slur that was frequently used to refer to disa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jortay, C
Format: Journal article
Language:Chinese
English
Published: British Association for Chinese Studies 2022
_version_ 1797107203243507712
author Jortay, C
author_facet Jortay, C
author_sort Jortay, C
collection OXFORD
description This article revisits Xiao Hong’s Field of Life and Death (Shengsi chang 生死場, 1935) and Market Street (Shangshi jie商市街, 1936) against sources from the periodical press to explore how Xiao Hong’s works speak back to discourses on “rubbish” (feiwu 廢物), a slur that was frequently used to refer to disabled people, to people of lower social status, and to women during the Republican period. In particular, I explore how the category of feiwu lays bare processes of marginalisation and dehumanisation, contextualising literary excerpts against New Life Movement slogans, satirical cartoons, and homemaking or hygienist press articles. I show how Xiao Hong’s works build through the category of feiwu a counter-discourse bearing on the representational entanglements of gender, class and disability, as materialised through animals (in Field of Life and Death) and through objects (in Market Street). In doing so, I contribute to a conceptual history of feiwu, and I extend existing scholarship concerned with literary representations of disability in China into the Republican period – a budding subfield that has so far mainly focused on works produced since the foundation of the People’s Republic in 1949.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:12:41Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:abb71701-6780-4592-9cca-271bd3a1d22c
institution University of Oxford
language Chinese
English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:12:41Z
publishDate 2022
publisher British Association for Chinese Studies
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:abb71701-6780-4592-9cca-271bd3a1d22c2022-07-04T09:53:47ZReclaiming rubbish: feiwu at the intersections of gender, class and disability in Xiao Hong's Market Street and Field of Life and DeathJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:abb71701-6780-4592-9cca-271bd3a1d22cChineseEnglishSymplectic ElementsBritish Association for Chinese Studies2022Jortay, CThis article revisits Xiao Hong’s Field of Life and Death (Shengsi chang 生死場, 1935) and Market Street (Shangshi jie商市街, 1936) against sources from the periodical press to explore how Xiao Hong’s works speak back to discourses on “rubbish” (feiwu 廢物), a slur that was frequently used to refer to disabled people, to people of lower social status, and to women during the Republican period. In particular, I explore how the category of feiwu lays bare processes of marginalisation and dehumanisation, contextualising literary excerpts against New Life Movement slogans, satirical cartoons, and homemaking or hygienist press articles. I show how Xiao Hong’s works build through the category of feiwu a counter-discourse bearing on the representational entanglements of gender, class and disability, as materialised through animals (in Field of Life and Death) and through objects (in Market Street). In doing so, I contribute to a conceptual history of feiwu, and I extend existing scholarship concerned with literary representations of disability in China into the Republican period – a budding subfield that has so far mainly focused on works produced since the foundation of the People’s Republic in 1949.
spellingShingle Jortay, C
Reclaiming rubbish: feiwu at the intersections of gender, class and disability in Xiao Hong's Market Street and Field of Life and Death
title Reclaiming rubbish: feiwu at the intersections of gender, class and disability in Xiao Hong's Market Street and Field of Life and Death
title_full Reclaiming rubbish: feiwu at the intersections of gender, class and disability in Xiao Hong's Market Street and Field of Life and Death
title_fullStr Reclaiming rubbish: feiwu at the intersections of gender, class and disability in Xiao Hong's Market Street and Field of Life and Death
title_full_unstemmed Reclaiming rubbish: feiwu at the intersections of gender, class and disability in Xiao Hong's Market Street and Field of Life and Death
title_short Reclaiming rubbish: feiwu at the intersections of gender, class and disability in Xiao Hong's Market Street and Field of Life and Death
title_sort reclaiming rubbish feiwu at the intersections of gender class and disability in xiao hong s market street and field of life and death
work_keys_str_mv AT jortayc reclaimingrubbishfeiwuattheintersectionsofgenderclassanddisabilityinxiaohongsmarketstreetandfieldoflifeanddeath