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Chinese Serial

Cannibalizing Classics, Colonial Slaves, Sino-Noir, and Taiwan

Chinese Serial cover

Chinese Serial

Cannibalizing Classics, Colonial Slaves, Sino-Noir, and Taiwan

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Pre-order. Available Nov 12 2026
$86.40 RRP $108.00 Website price saving $21.60 (20%)

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Description

Sustaining Chinese culture like the ritual of breakfast cereal, one of the earliest classic chapter novels, Monkey, unfolds as a pilgrimage over 81 calamities revolving around the pilgrim's flesh that gives immortality to whomever partakes it.

China's never-ending toothsome and nauseous cannibalistic trope continues in modern (neo)colonial feeding frenzy in Lu Xun, Wu Zhuoliu, and Yu Hua. Embodying (neo)colonial powers, the epithet “foreign devils” in Lu Xun and his contemporaries turns into an idol should one of the devils love chinoiserie as much as Robert Hans van Gulik, who sires the oc/cult in the Tang dynasty's Judge-cum-Detective Dee. Dynastic TV dramas on Dee and others invariably feature the proverbial “half-men,” eunuchs who usurp the imperial power, exposing the master-slave bond/age in figurative castration.

This flesh-eating chop suey feast comes to span China, Europe, and America, where Oriental stigma of slanting eyes is transformed into stigmata of white and off-white-mainstream and ethnic-spiritual triumphalism. Asian North American self-Orientalizing meets one Asian immigrant talking back from Taiwan's juancun, military dependents' village. This magical menu even boasts of the as yet inedible rock of Taiwan, which fantasizes itself a tasty morsel to Japan to perish any thought of Red China's maws. Seriality then turns deadly in Chinese TV dramas featuring serial killers and dismemberments. Does this turn to Sino-noir signal a psychological displacement from one's terminal condition, cowering under that which cannot be named-the dictatorship not so much of the proletariat as of the Party secretariat?

After this teasing/teething "Appetizer" of an introduction that sets the table of contents-or just the table-the cannibalistic chop suey countenances "Ten Courses" and one "Dessert," all in the flourishes of the Edwardian font becoming any designer menu at an upscale establishment. The appetizer, ten courses, and dessert make twelve dishes, a perfect Taiwanese banquet. Bon Appetit!

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  • accessibility@bloomsbury.com

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Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgement

Appetizer
1. The First Course: Mythical Monkey: Eat People or Oneself, Spill Blood or Light
2. The Second Course: Lu Xun: Socialist Superman, Dangling Sick Man
3. The Third Course: The Orphan Teared Up; Surreal Horror Tore Up
4. The Fourth Course: The Oc/cult in Dee: Di Gong, Van Gulik, Tsui Hark, Chinese TV
5. The Fifth Course: Master-Slave Bond/age in China's Wuxia with Eunuchs
6. The Sixth Course: Stigma/ta: Eyes Slant like Chinks of Christ, or Chin-Kee of American Born Chinese
7. The Seventh Course: Bao and Turning Red: Eating Chinese in Bloody Toronto
8. The Eighth Course: Get Out of the Village: Watching The Prisoner with Chinese Subtitles in Juancun
9. The Ninth Course: Colonial “Shina Swine”; Millennial Taiwan's Nipponophile
10. The Tenth Course: Sino-Noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments
The Dessert of Taiwan

Bibliography
Endnotes
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published Nov 12 2026
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Pages 240
ISBN 9798216450078
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Illustrations 38 bw illus
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Sheng-mei Ma

Sheng-mei Ma is Professor of English at Michigan S…

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