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Loading... The True Story of Ah Q (1921)by Lu Xun
![]() No current Talk conversations about this book. Short, punchy satirical depiction of revolutionary China ( ![]() Take my rating with a grain of salt, since I read this in a ruined Spanish-language edition from 1970. Lu Xun gets his point across, and the misadventures of A Q are certainly entertaining, but for me the satire is just a bit too on the nose. It's clear from the first five pages that A Q's "spiritual victories" are symbolic of late imperial China'self-destructive pride in the face of constant inadequacy and humiliation, and from then on every chapter is a variation on the theme. For me it was 5/5 as a document of its times, but not necessarily captivating on its own. The prose seemed simple enough that I don't think i missed too much in translation, but it's likely that I would have been better off reading this in the original. A remarkable short story, about a man who is relentlessly proud of his 'spiritual victories', after he gets beaten up, humiliated, and gets his head sliced off while trying to think of a line from Chinese opera to quote. Thick with allegory. Need to get more from this author. The author in a very short book is able to convey what it was like to live in China just before the revolution. The book is also a sharp satire on the corruption of Chinese society at that time. I enjoyed the book and expect that I will learn more when I read it again. An important novel describing life in early twentieth-century China. no reviews | add a review
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A towering figure in the literary history of twentieth-century China, Lu Xun has exerted immense and continuous influence through his short stories, which remain today as powerful as they were first written. While echoes of these stories can still be heard in the fictional works from both sides of the Taiwan Strait in the eighties and nineties, The True Story of Ah Q has long become an intrinsic part of the Chinese vocabulary. Like many Chinese intellectuals searching for a solution to China's problems, Lu Xun went to Japan to study medicine, a choice he later abandoned for a career in writing, which he considered to be a far more effective weapon to save China. A prolific author of pungent and "dagger-like" essays, Lu Xun is also a tireless translator of Western critical and literary works. His fictional works have been translated into more than twenty languages. No library descriptions found. |
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![]() GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)809Literature By Topic History, description and criticism of more than two literaturesLC ClassificationRatingAverage:![]()
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