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Nobel Laureate Gao Xingjian is amongst the most challenging writers
of the present era. He has probed the dynamics of Chinese and
European literature and developed unique strategies for the writing
of seventeen plays, two novels, a collection of short stories and a
collection of poems. He has also written two collections of
criticism. The present collection takes the title Aesthetics and
Creation from the name of the Chinese collection from which most of
these essays are drawn, but it also includes some of Gao's most
recent unpublished essays. This book is both indispensable and
inspiring reading for intellectuals and informed readers who regard
themselves as citizen of the world. For academics, researchers and
students engaged in the disciplines of literature and visual art
studies, world literature studies, comparative literature studies,
performance studies, theatre studies, cultural studies, narrative
fiction studies, and studies in the history of literature and the
visual arts in modern times, this book is essential and
thought-provoking reading that will have many positive
outcomes.This book is in the Cambria Sinophone World Series
In 1982 Chinese playwright, novelist and artist Gao Xingjian was diagnosed with lung cancer, the very disease which had killed his father. For six weeks Gao inhabited a transcendental state of imminent death, treating himself to the finest foods he could afford while spending time reading in an old graveyard in the Beijing suburbs. But a secondary examination revealed there was no cancer – he had won a ‘reprieve from death’ and had been thrown back into the world of the living. Faced with a repressive cultural environment and the threat of a spell in a prison farm, Gao fled Beijing. He travelled first to the ancient forests of central China and from there to the east coast, passing through eight provinces and seven nature reserves, a journey of fifteen thousand kilometres over a period of five months. The result of this epic voyage of discovery is Soul Moutain. Interwoven into this picaresque journey are myriad stories and countless memorable characters – from venerable Daoist masters and Buddhist monks and nuns to mythical Wild Men; deadly Qichun snakes to farting buses. Conventions are challenged, preconceptions are thwarted and the human condition, with all its foibles and triumphs, is laid bare.
Moving between the nightmare of the Cultural Revolution and the tentative, limited liberties of the China of the 1990s, One Man's Bible weaves memories of a Beijing boyhood and amorous encounters in Hong Kong with a fictionalized account of Gao Xingjian's life under the communist regime ? where a single sentence spoken ten years earlier can make one an enemy of the state. A fluid, elegant exploration of memory, One Man's Bible is a profound meditation on the essence of writing and exile, on the effects of political oppression on the human spirit ? and on how that spirit can triumph.
This volume is an important addition to comparative literature
studies with its focus on literary intercrossings between East Asia
and the West.
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