Brian DeMare is an Assistant Professor in the Department of History, Tulane University, where he teaches courses on modern Chinese history. He has published articles in two of the top journals in the field, The China Journal and Modern Chinese Literature and Culture, and lived in China for five years. During that time, he conducted several research trips into the countryside, visiting archives and interviewing active drama troupes and has ties with Chinese academics studying the countryside in Shanxi. One of his main research sites is Long Bow, well-known in the West due to William Hinton, who wrote Fanshen, about land reform in that village.
Charting their training, travels, and performances, this innovative study explores the role of the artists that roamed the Chinese countryside in support of Mao's communist revolution. DeMare traces the development of Mao's 'cultural army' from its genesis in Red Army propaganda teams to its full development as a largely civilian force composed of amateur and professional drama troupes in the early years of the PRC. Drawing from memoirs, artistic handbooks, and rare archival sources, Mao's Cultural Army uncovers the arduous and complex process of creating revolutionary dramas that would appeal to China's all-important rural audiences. The Communists strived for a disciplined cultural army to promote party policies, but audiences often shunned modern and didactic shows, and instead clamoured for traditional works. DeMare illustrates how drama troupes, caught between the party and their audiences, did their best to resist the ever growing reach of the PRC state.
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主要還是描述性的,分析性的論述沒有超過“鄉村劇團很重要”太多,不過導論裏處理現有(低級)研究的方式值得藉鑒,另外China Journal and MCLC are really not "two of the top journals in the field"...
评分感覺有的問題洪長泰的碩士學生講瞭一些,然後跟韓曉莉的書也有重閤。
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评分感覺有的問題洪長泰的碩士學生講瞭一些,然後跟韓曉莉的書也有重閤。
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