Eileen Chang’s “Sealed Off” and the Possibility of Modernist Romance

Authors

  • Eric Sandberg Phd, Docent Assistant Professor Department of English City University of Hong Kong

Keywords:

Eileen Chang, modernism, romance

Abstract

This article proposes a re-interpretation of Eileen Chang’s short story “Sealed Off” as a quintessentially modernist romance. Other critics have seen the story’s central event–a brief encounter between a man and a woman during a wartime traffic closure in Japanese occupied Shanghai–as an dystopian aberration or an instance of a failed, artificial romance. I argue that by reading the story in the broader contexts of Chang’s writing and of modernist writing more generally, we can see it instead as a mediation on the potentialities of love in the modern age, and on the ways in which such love can be represented in modernist writing.

Author Biography

  • Eric Sandberg, Phd, Docent Assistant Professor Department of English City University of Hong Kong

    Eric Sandberg is an Assistant Professor at City University of Hong Kong and a Docent at the University of Oulu, Finland. He completed his PhD in 2010 at the University of Edinburgh. His research interests range from modernism to the twenty-first century novel. His monograph Virginia Woolf: Experiments in Character was published in 2014, he co-edited Adaptation, Awards Culture, and the Value of Prestige (Palgrave, 2017), and edited 100 Greatest Literary Detectives (Rowman & Littlefield, 2018). His work has appeared in international journals including English Studies, Neohelicon, and The Cambridge Quarterly. He is the lead researcher on a project funded by the Joint Committee for Nordic Research Councils in the Humanities and Social Sciences that explores nostalgia in contemporary culture.

Downloads

Published

2018-07-18