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Book reviews for "Lee,_Leo_Ou-fan" sorted by average review score:

Shanghai Modern: The Flowering of a New Urban Culture in China, 1930-1945
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Univ Pr (1999)
Authors: Leo Ou-Fan Lee and Ou-Fan Leo Lee
Amazon base price: $53.00
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Good as a "source-book", but intellectually disappointing
This book is precious in providing information, anecdotes, facts, but unfortunately lacks in intellectual depth or critical insight. It is obvious that the author loves his subject--the urban culture in 1930s-40s Shanghai, but when it comes to critical analysis of the rich data it offers, the author's quotations of other people's works often seem more interesting and more penetrating than his own viewpoints, which are painfully limited to a few catchphrases such as modernism, "modernity in the Chinese context," "body," decadence, etc.. Not that this is a terrible work, but simply that it is a little disappointing, coming from a senior professor well-known in his field. One thing that seems to hamper the author is his apparent lack of sound knowledge of literature of any other period or place except for what was produced in China (and mainly Shanghai) in the first 40 years of the 20th century, and this, unfortunately, does show after a while, as the book constantly involves references to European literatures and classical Chinese literary tradtion.
Still, it would be a good buy for people who share the kind of nostalgia for the 1930s Shanghai or who want to find out more about Shanghai literary world in that period.

An excellent introduction to Shanghai's cultural legacy
Shanghai is best known for its negative legacies, "whore of the orient" and all that. But while those foreigners were drinking themselves silly all hours of the day, the city's Chinese residents were building up a world of art and letters that China had not since been able to rival.

Authors with a revolutionary bent are better known these days in China. The Chinese Communist Party posthumously revived Lu Xun as a standard bearer, and many other social critics such as Mao Dun, Bing Xin, and Ba Jin saw Communism as the natural out-growth of their ideals. Others, however, were more romantic, more bourgeois, more purely artistic in their vision. They, along with most of Shanghai's leading film-makers, actors, and musicians, flocked en masse to Hong Kong after 1949. Today, Old Shanghai films and literature are far better known and more popular in Hong Kong than they are in Shanghai.

That's where Leo Ou-Fan Lee fits into the picture. The Hong Kong native is one of the leading experts on the literary legacy of Old Shanghai, and he brings alive the writing and history of greats such as Zhang Ailing (Eileen Chang) for connoisseurs and novices alike. Lee offers a chapter on the Shanghai film industry, which is not his specialty and is not very strongly presented, apart from an interesting analysis of themes of modernity. His presentation of the huge publishing world pictorial magazines, with glossy spreads and advertisements that are indicative of societal norms and values at the time, proves quite engaging. Granted, the analysis seems to be based on just a few vintage copies of "Liang You" (Young Companion), but as that was a darn good magazine, one can't criticize. His real passion, however, and the strength of the book, are in the literary field. Lee seems to have a bit of a crush on Zhang Ailing, but then again, who doesn't?

Don't miss this book
Whether your rate to "shanghai modern" is high or low, this book is welcomed in some area. It's not because of the information it gives, but because of the way of investigating the culture of "old shanghai" in modern China. You may think this kind of seeing culture and literature doesn't have profound meaning. But this kind of study is at the begining. Moreover, his analysis is not up-to-date thing. (please consult the introduction) You should struggle to collect the right (and many) data if you want to reconstruct the old times of shanghai.

If you have difficulty in reading English, then take a look at the translation book which was published by Oxford University Press. The name is "shang hai mo deng".


Land Without Ghosts: Chinese Impressions of America from the Mid-Nineteenth Century to the Present
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (1993)
Authors: R. David Arkush, Leo O. Lee, and Ou-Fan Leo Lee
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the tables are turned
This is a collection of essays about Chinese impressions of America over the last 150 years. We know what Americans thought of the Chinese when they first arrived -- this is a rare opportunity to learn what the Chinese thought of Americans. Topics include helpful suggestions concerning American ettiquite, essays on American women, black Americans, and the various problems in America (too much traffic, excessive consumption, etc.). This book will allow the American reader to examine his/her own society from a different perspective.


An Intellectual History of Modern China
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (15 June, 2002)
Authors: Merle Goldman and Leo Ou-fan Lee
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Land Without Ghosts
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (1993)
Authors: R. David Arkush and Ou-Fan Leo Lee
Amazon base price: $35.00
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Lu Xun and His Legacy
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (1985)
Author: Leo Ou-Fan Lee
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Modern Chinese Stories and Novellas, 1919-1949
Published in Paperback by Columbia University Press (15 April, 1981)
Authors: Joseph S. Lau, Ou-Fan Leo Lee, and Chih-Tsing Hsia
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People or Monsters?: And Other Stories and Reportage from China After Mao (Chinese Literature in Translation)
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (1983)
Authors: Pin-Yen Liu, Liu Binyan, Ou-Fan Leo Lee, and Liu Binyan
Amazon base price: $20.00
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People or Monsters?: And Other Stories and Reportage from China After Mao (Chinese Literature in Translation)
Published in Paperback by Indiana University Press (1983)
Authors: Liu Binyan, Binyan Liu, and Ou-Fan Leo Lee
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The Red Azalea: Chinese Poetry Since the Cultural Revolution
Published in Paperback by University of Hawaii Press (1990)
Authors: Edward Morin, Leo Ou-Fan Lee, Fang Dai, and Dennis Ding
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The Romantic Generation of Modern Chinese Writers
Published in Paperback by Books on Demand ()
Author: Ou-Fan Leo Lee
Amazon base price: $109.20
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