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To browse Academia. This project addresses the concept of postmodern alienation in post-Mao Chinese fiction, especially fiction published after This project comprises five chapters. The first chapter introduces the concepts of alienation and postmodernism and gives an assessment of the field and the theme to date.
Only very recently has the concept of alienation been resuscitated as postmodern alienation. Postmodern alienation signifies the correlation of postmodern socio-cultural change and individual experience. At its best, postmodern alienation is delayed accommodation. At its worst, it is an alienation from life itself. In post-Mao fiction postmodern alienation appears at its worst. As a literary theme, the comprehensiveness of discontinuity, fragmentation, and unrepresentability translate into the motif of the unlived life.
The unlived life is a wasted life of missed opportunities, opportunities never had, premature death, the inability to position oneself. To many of these characters to have been born is the greatest dilemma of life. The second chapter discusses the context of the unlived life: discontinuity. It is placed in fictions of change, especially historiographic fiction. Through the rewriting of history as haphazard events, writers question both the knowledge of the past and its representation.
Chapter Three provides the content of the unlived life. The lack of a frame of reference, be it personal or historical, is experienced in fragmentation and void.