In the scope of world literature, this book aims to fill a small but important puzzle piece in the global network of literary influence. In a world where cultural exchanges have become increasingly frequent and convenient, and at a time when counter-globalization seems to burgeon into a hazardous trend, it is beneficial to look back to the 1920s-1930s, a time that is as equally tumultuous as today, to examine the global influence network that has taken us where we are, and to understand that in the dynamic of literary influence, no single piece of literature can have its significance alone.
This groundbreaking book will benefit the scholarship of Shao and contribute to the relevant research in Chinese studies and word and music studies. Therefore, it will be of great use and interest to researchers of comparative literature, Chinese literature, and world literature, as well as scholars of word and music studies.
Tian Jin received his PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Edinburgh. He holds an MSc in Literature and Society from the University of Edinburgh and a BA in English from Sun Yat-sen University. Jin’s current research interests lie in the fields of Chinese republican poetry, late Victorian and early modernist English poetry, and the intercorrelations among them.