
Harry Kuoshu Furman Hall 235G |
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Professor Harry Kuoshu came to Furman in 2005. He previously taught at Reed College in Portland, Oregon and Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts. Courses: CHN 220 Survey of Chinese Culture CHN 225 Chinese Film CHN 230 Survey of Chinese Literature Discipline and Specialty: Chinese film studies, Chinese literature and cultural studies, Chinese language teaching Current Research Topic: Urbanism in post-Mao Chinese cinema Publications: "Shanghai Baby, Chinese Xiaozi, and Pirated Lifestyles in the Age of Globalization," Concentric, 31.2 (Fall 2005): 85-100 Celluloid China: Cinematic Encounters with Culture and Society. Carbondale: Southern Illinoise University Press, 2002 Lightness of Being China: Adaptation and Discursive Figuration in Cinema and Theater. "Asian Thought and Culture," Sandra Wawrytko, General Editor, Vol. 37. New York: Peter Lang, 1999 “Beijing Bastard, The 6th Generation Directors, and 'Generation-X' in China." Asian Cinema, 10.2 (Spring/Summer 1999): 18-28 “Visualizing Ah Q: An Allegory's Resistance to Representation," Journal of Modern Literature in Chinese, 2.2 (January 1999): 1-35 “Will Godot Come by Bus or through a Trace? Discussion of a Chinese Adsurdist Play." Modern Drama, 41.3 (Fall 1998): 461-473 European Culture: An Introduction. Beijing: Foreign Language Teaching & Research Press, 1992; co-author (with Wang Zuoliang, Zhu Jue, Li Pingwei, et. al). Laughing Lost in the Mountains: Poems of Wang Wei, University Press of New England, 1991; co-translator (with Tony and Willis Barnstone). Other Research Interests: Contemporary Chinese urban youth culture and xiaozi (petty-bourgeois) literature.
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