20th Century China in the Eyes of Mo Yan and
His Generation of Novelists
|
Left to Right:Mr. Mo Yan, Dr. Jeffery Kinkley, Dr. Ho Yong
|
Winner of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature, Mo Yan is unique in the broad field of contemporary Chinese novelists. The sages of Stockholm credit his achievement to a "hallucinatory realism" that "merges folk tales, history and the contemporary." The view from China, however, can be somewhat different. Mo Yan's intense interest in his roots-in 20th century Chinese history-is characteristic of a whole generation of writers:those old enough to claim personal knowledge of the Cultural Revolution, but too young to have experienced the "old society" before the reign of Mao Zedong. Their explorations of history and memory in long, epic novels, as pioneered by Mo Yan in the 1980s, differentiate these writers from both older and younger Chinese thinkers and writers.
Following a road that has taken them from avant-gardism and absurdism to new kinds of realism, Mo Yan, Su Tong, Yu Hua, Zhang Wei, Ge Fei, Wang Anyi, Li Rui, and Han Shaogong have created grand new visions of modern Chinese history often described as magical, hallucinatory, or hysterical. Jeffrey C. Kinkley, professor of history at St. John's University in New York, argues that these visions are dystopian. The writers' major novels, which can now be sampled in excellent English translations, bear comparison with similar experiments from Latin America and South Asia.
Kinkley, who teaches and translates modern Chinese literature and film, is known for his studies of the prewar author Shen Congwen, 20th century Chinese detective stories, fictional explorations of the legal process and official corruption, and other topics in the intellectual and literary history of 20th century China. His studies of China's dystopian "new historical novels," partly funded by a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, will be forthcoming in a book from Columbia University Press.
Saturday, October 5, 2013 ~ 2 pm to 4 pm
Admission: Free for members and $5 for non-members. Advance registration and payment are required.
Location: China Institute, 125 East 65th Street, New York, NY 10065(between Lexington & Park Avenues)
Click here to register for this lecture.