"Tennessee Williams stands alongside Eugene O'Neill and Arthur Miller as the most influential American playwrights in China--Shouhua Qi tells us why in this thoroughly researched and engaging study that places Williams' work in an entirely new context of China's social and political shifts of the past half-century in terms of national ideology, ideas about sexuality, and reception of foreign literature." (Claire Conceison, Quanta Professor of Chinese Culture and Professor of Theater Arts, MIT, author of Significant Other: Staging the American in China) "Shouhua Qi's persuasive and readable study discovers important intersections of reception, adaptation, and craft. A playwright who has seemed at times definitionally and perhaps oppressively American thus assumes a newfound breadth of meaning and appeal." (Alexander Pettit, Professor of English, University of North Texas, Editor Eugene O'Neill Review) "Shouhua Qi's valuable contribution to the field of Williams scholarship explores the reception of Williams' plays in China through a rare bilingual/bicultural lens that adds to our understanding of the complexities involved in adapting art across cultural divides." (Annette J. Saddik, Distinguished Professor of Theatre and Literature, City University of New York).
Culture, History, and the Reception of Tennessee Williams in China