|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
Shanghaied in Peking
| Article
# : |
14859 |
|
|
Section : |
BOOK WORLD
|
| Issue
Date : |
10 / 1988 |
2,093 Words |
| Author
: |
Richard Amber Richard Amber is a journalist who writes frequently about
China, where he lived and worked. |
PEKING
Anthony Grey
New York: Little, Brown and Company, 1988
672 pp., $19.95
It's not surprising that the drama of twentieth century Chinese history has proved irresistible to epic novelists. From the Opium War of 1839 and the seizure of Hong Kong by British colonizers the year after to the tumult of latter-day Shanghai--teeming city of revolutionaries, greed, entrepreneurs, and sin-the various elements of China's modern experience have the stuff of drama and melodrama. It is history on a massive scale, full of portent and meaning. The French novelist Andre Malraux set a standard for the China epic genre with Man's Fate, transforming the defeat of the communist-led urban insurrection by Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists in 1927 into one of the great works of Western fiction.
Since, then, most of the creators of the China epics have mingled a certain conception of Asian eroticism with personal Drama, generally involving a European or an American who has come east in search of fortune or adventure, and set this against a background of mystery and political turmoil. Much of this formula is included in a recent contribution to the genre by Anthony Grey, a former British journalist in Peking, who was jailed by the communist government during the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution and who thus has an insider's view of political fanaticism. Grey's Peking features the standard refrain of other China epics--idealistic foreigners sailing through the stormy seas of Chinese events. In this regard it has some of the predictability of other China epics written by foreigners. (The Chinese have not
... (2000 of 12595 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|