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Winner of the Mao Dun Literature Prize. From one of China's most
celebrated authors comes a masterful novel about modernity and
tradition, love and obsession, and economic change and quixotic
dreams-all set against the backdrop of a rapidly urbanizing China.
In post-Cultural Revolution China, in the fading village of
Freshwind, the fates of two households are shifting. The Bais, once
the most powerful family in the region, have fallen from status.
Their beautiful daughter, Snow Bai, an embodiment of tradition,
pursues a career in a vanishing art form. The Xias, enthusiastic
members of the Party, are on the rise. Their favorite son, Wind
Xia, is a citified politician whose marriage to Snow Bai could
unite the two families. But in a village casting about for a new
road to prosperity, fortunes can change. Watching it all unfold is
a local outcast named Spark. The inveterate busybody is given to
strange visions and flights of fancy, and is motivated by the only
constant in Freshwind: his mad love for Snow Bai. Expansive, funny,
monumental, and deeply poignant, Jia Pingwa's The Shaanxi Opera is
a keenly observant portrait of China in an era of globalization,
societal upheaval, and the growing influence of popular culture.
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Broken Wings (Paperback)
Jia Pingwa; Translated by Nicky Harman
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R342
R277
Discovery Miles 2 770
Save R65 (19%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Happy Dreams (Paperback)
Jia Pingwa; Translated by Nicky Harman
1
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R301
R237
Discovery Miles 2 370
Save R64 (21%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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From one of China's foremost authors, Jia Pingwa's Happy Dreams is
a powerful depiction of life in industrializing contemporary China,
in all its humor and pathos, as seen through the eyes of Happy Liu,
a charming and clever rural laborer who leaves his home for the
gritty, harsh streets of Xi'an in search of better life. After a
disastrous end to a relationship, Hawa "Happy" Liu embarks on a
quest to find the recipient of his donated kidney and a life that
lives up to his self-given moniker. Traveling from his rural home
in Freshwind to the city of Xi'an, Happy brings only an eternally
positive attitude, his devoted best friend Wufu, and a pair of
high-heeled women's shoes he hopes to fill with the love of his
life. In Xi'an, Happy and Wufu find jobs as trash pickers sorting
through the city's filth, but Happy refuses to be deterred by
inauspicious beginnings. In his eyes, dusty birds become phoenixes,
the streets become rivers, and life is what you make of it. When he
meets the beautiful Yichun, he imagines she is the one to fill the
shoes and his Cinderella-esque dream. But when the harsh city
conditions and the crush of societal inequalities take the life of
his friend and shake Happy to his soul, he'll need more than just
his unrelenting optimism to hold on to the belief that something
better is possible.
When originally published in 1993, Ruined City (Fei Du) was
promptly banned by China's State Publishing Administration,
ostensibly for its explicit sexual content. Since then,
award-winning author Jia Pingwa's vivid portrayal of contemporary
China's social and economic transformation has become a classic,
viewed by critics and scholars of Chinese literature as one of the
most important novels of the twentieth century. Howard Goldblatt's
deft translation now gives English-speaking readers their first
chance to enjoy this masterpiece of social satire by one of China's
most provocative writers. While eroticism, exoticism, and esoteric
minutiae - the ""pornography"" that earned the opprobrium of
Chinese officials - pervade Ruined City, this tale of a famous
contemporary writer's sexual and legal imbroglios is an incisive
portrait of politics and culture in a rapidly changing China. In a
narrative that ranges from political allegory to parody, Jia Pingwa
tracks his antihero Zhuang Zhidie through progressively more
involved and inevitably disappointing sexual liaisons. Set in a
modern metropolis rife with power politics, corruption, and
capitalist schemes, the novel evokes an unrequited romantic longing
for China's premodern, rural past, even as unfolding events caution
against the trap of nostalgia. Amid comedy and chaos, the author
subtly injects his concerns about the place of intellectual
seriousness, censorship, and artistic integrity in the changing
conditions of Chinese society. Rich with detailed description and
vivid imagery, Ruined City transports readers into a world
abounding with the absurdities and harshness of modern life.
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