Critical Zone 3
A Forum of Chinese and Western Knowledge
(批評領域(三):中西知識論壇)
ISBN : 978-962-209-857-2
Critical Zone: A Forum of Chinese and Western Knowledge
February 2009
244 pages, 6″ x 9″
- HK$195.00
Ebooks
Critical Zone is a project of collaboration among scholars from Hong Kong, mainland China, the United States, and Europe. An established series in cultural and literary studies, jointly published by the Hong Kong University Press and Nanjing University Press, it is conceived as an intellectual bridge between China and the rest of the world, and a zone of scholarly and critical convergence beyond regional and disciplinary boundaries.
Each volume has two sections: the first features original articles on a set of related topics by scholars from around the world, and the second includes review essays and translations chosen as manifestations of recent critical trends and debates in China.
This third volume begins with a section of powerful original essays entitled Locations, containing four essays of cultural and historical studies of Hong Kong, and then broadening out with two further essays on America as an “empire of immigrants”, and on imagining the global future. The second section contains English translations of path-breaking work by Chinese scholars on Chinese nationalism, history writing, China’s naval capabilities and foreign policy strategy.
Critical Zone will be valuable to international readers who have no direct linguistic access to Chinese scholarship and to Chinese readers who wish to be informed of critical and intellectual developments elsewhere. It will be of interest to academics, graduate students, and undergraduate students working in the humanities and social sciences.
“Now that the Olympic year has stimulated China and the West to want to know more about each other, Critical Zone’s adventurous exercise in cross-cultural dialogue is more timely than ever. Volume 3 continues to present critical analysis of exceptional originality and depth. This issue also includes thought-provoking discussion of Hong Kong’s distinctive identity, as well as its historic role in global exchange.” —Catherine Belsey, Research Professor in English, Swansea University
“The essays in this third number of Critical Zone open up from its own location in Hong Kong to pursue a challenging dialogue about the relation between people and place, past and future. Critical Zone continues to be a unique and vital conduit of intellectual exchange and cross-cultural communication among scholars of the humanities in China and beyond.” —Zhou Xiaoyi, Professor of English, Peking University