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- Comparative Literature Studies
- Penn State University Press
- Article
- There is no Middle Road/That is Itself the Middle Way Volume 55, Number 4, 2018, pp. 897-905
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $26.00 USD.
This issue contains 21 articles in total
- Jugalbandi
- Response
- Thinking Thinking Literature Across Continents Across Generations
- Dissensus, Irony, Dialectic
- Deconstruction and the Transcultural Uncanny
- There is no Middle Road/That is Itself the Middle Way
- Toward Transcultural Theory
- Introduction
- Semiotics of Disaster: Writing in the Aftermath of Japan's 3/11
- Speculating Extinction: Eco-Accidents, Solastalgia, and Object Lessons in Wu Ming-Yi's The Man with the Compound Eyes
- From Rice to Apple-Pear Style: An Ecocritical Approach to China's Korean Ethnic Minority Literature
- Animal Narrative and the Dis-eventalization of Politics: An Ecological–Cultural Approach to Mo Yan's Life and Death are Wearing me Out
- Is Man Superior to Animals? A Comparative Reading of Animals in Biblical Narratives and Chinese Classic Texts
- Re-interpreting Dao De Jing from an Ecological Perspective
- An Ecofeminist Perspective on Sylvia Plath and Zhai Yongming
- Nature and Ethnic Women: An Ecofeminist Reading of Chi Zijian's The Last Quarter of the Moon and Linda Hogan's Solar Storms
- Toward a Holistic Ecofeminism: A Chinese Perspective
- The Last "Hero" and Jia Pingwa's Ecological Concerns in Remembering Wolves
- Delving Into a World of Non-Human Experience: Unnatural Narrative and Ecological Critique of Chen Yingsong's The Last Dance of a Leopard
- Commentary
- Introduction: Ecocriticism and Ecocivilization in the Confucian Cultural Environment
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