Podcast — Episode 15

Thornton Wilder and American Literature: A Conversation with Hansong Dan

Hansong Dan

Our guest on this episode is Hansong Dan, author of To Realize the Universal: Allegorical Narrative in Thornton Wilder’s Plays and Novels.

Part One:

How popular is the study of English and American literature in China? (1:15) — Why study American literature? (2:15) — How Chinese students respond to Henry James, Sherwood Anderson, and Upton Sinclair (5:00) — Individualism, the American dream and Hollywood (9:00) — From small-town childhood to big-city education (12:45) — Allegory and Thornton Wilder (14:30) — Allegory vs. realism in 20th-century fiction (18:15) — Thornton Wilder’s modern allegories (19:45) — Our Town: theology and existentialism — The cosmology of the small town (26:15) — Mortality and transience (29:30)

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Part Two:

Different concepts of allegory: classical Chinese literature vs. Western literature (1:00) — Dream of the Red Chamber and a subtle political allegory (1:30) — Terrorism and literature after 9/11 (4:30) — Sensationalism and the challenge to serious literature: the terrorist vs. the novelist (6:45) — Don DeLillo, irony, state violence (10:45) — Translating Thornton Wilder in China (19:00) — Wilder vs. Thomas Pynchon: a translator’s perspective (23:00) — How to translate Pynchon into Chinese (25:00)


Hansong Dan’s visit to UT Dallas was made possible by the Institute for the Study of American Art in China at the Edith O’Donnell Institute of Art History.

This episode was recorded and edited by Andrew Oh, and the Athenaeum Review podcast is produced by Creative Disturbance.

Filed under LiteratureEdith O'Donnell Institute of Art HistoryUnited States