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The Discourse of Guohua in Wartime Shanghai

Chan, Pedith

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Authors

Pedith Chan



Abstract

This article looks at artists’ engagement with artistic activities carried out in wartime Shanghai, with a particular focus on guohua (lit., ‘national painting’). Drawing on primary sources such as archival materials, diaries, paintings, magazines and newspapers, it explores the layered meanings attached to and social functions of guohua and the institutional structure of the Shanghai art world from the gudao (solitary island) period to the advent of full occupation from December 1941 onwards. As a symbol of Chinese elite culture, guohua continued to dominate the Shanghai art world with support from Wang Jingwei’s regime and the occupying Japanese, and was deemed the root of East Asian art and one of the crucial pillars of the East Asian renaissance in the discourse of the new order of East Asian art. Through closely examining the discourse of guohua in occupied Shanghai, this article advances our understanding of the production and consumption of art in wartime Shanghai by going beyond the paradigmatic binary of ‘collaboration’ and ‘resistance’.

Citation

Chan, P. (2020). The Discourse of Guohua in Wartime Shanghai. European Journal of East Asian Studies, 19(2), 263-296. https://doi.org/10.1163/15700615-01902010

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 11, 2020
Publication Date Dec 4, 2020
Deposit Date Dec 11, 2020
Publicly Available Date Dec 11, 2020
Journal European Journal of East Asian Studies
Print ISSN 1568-0584
Electronic ISSN 1570-0615
Publisher Brill Academic Publishers
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 19
Issue 2
Pages 263-296
DOI https://doi.org/10.1163/15700615-01902010

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