Book Review: China in Ten Words

China in Ten Words by Yu Hua; A Book Review by Sylvia Krebs 

 

Yu Hua, author of the novels Brothers and To Live, has put together a
thought-provoking book of essays, China in Ten Words. The chosen ten—people, leader, reading, writing, Lu Xun, revolution, disparity, grassroots, copycat, and bamboozle—are the tools with which Yu considers both historical experience and current conditions in China.
            Yu’s introduction to the essays sets the tone: informal, personal, humane. For example, he uses a memory from his days as a rookie dentist, ordered to give inoculations against various diseases to both adults and children, to conclude that only when suffering is shared can a person truly live. “So when in this book I write of China’s pain, I am registering my pain too, because China’s pain is mine.”
            Other examples illustrate Yu’s focus on linking history with the present. In “Leader,” he introduces a recurring theme: the impact of the Cultural Revolution even on children. He describes the hysterical tears of two first graders, a boy and a girl, who are accused of being “little counterrevolutionaries.” He finds connections between the adulation of Mao during the Cultural Revolution and the cruelty engendered now by the disparities in contemporary Chinese society.
            Perhaps the best essay is “Reading,” in which Yu describes the dearth of reading material during the Cultural Revolution. He traces his obsessive personal quest as a child and adolescent, struggling to find books. One reviewer comments: “Nothing I’ve ever read captures the power and subversive nature of youthful reading.” In concluding the chapter, Yu observes that if literature possesses a “mysterious power,” it is this: “one can
read a book by a writer of a different time, a different country, a different race, a different language, and a different culture—and there encounter a sensation that is one’s very own.” Two other essays, “Writing” and “Lu Xun,” focus on Yu’s own development as a writer and his complicated relationship with the long dead man whom many regard as China’s greatest writer.
“Revolution” offers more excellent examples of Yu’s ability to connect past and present, and to use ordinary things and people to illuminate broader issues. His stories about individual experiences offer incontrovertible evidence of how revolutionary words and actions can be perverted.
            The last four essays take on characteristics of contemporary Chinese society that Yu sees as corrupting influences. He illustrates disparity with a story about rural children who had never even heard of soccer. “Grassroots,” defined as the lower economic groups in society, leads to another comparison with the Cultural Revolution. Mao’s policies, says Yu, provided an opportunity to redistribute political power. On the other hand, Deng Xiaoping’s program offers an opportunity to redistribute economic power. China’s explosive development creates fertile ground for both “copycatting” and “bamboozling.” Both can be seen as humorous, but they have the potential to create serious social problems.
            China in Ten Words is indeed a thought-provoking book. Having just returned from China, I am tempted to dismiss some of Yu Hua’s dismal view of the society. However, his descriptions of Cultural Revolution life and today’s disparities all ring too true to ignore. Reading these essays raises again the question: Is the Chinese glass half full or half empty?
            In concluding his introduction, Yu writes: “My goal, then, is to compress the endless chatter of China today into ten simple words . . . and finally to clear a path through the social complexities and staggering contrasts of contemporary China.”
            Whether Yu Hua has accomplished his goal is debatable. China remains a thicket of contrasts, successes, and failures that cannot be completely sorted out with ten words. However, what Yu has done is to stimulate the reader’s thinking about China, both past and present. 
Author Yu Hua


China in Ten Words
By Yu Hua; Translated by Allan H. Barr

Anchor Books, 2011
Reviewed by Sylvia Krebs

USCPFA Fall Forum 2013

“What’s Up in China:
Comments by Long-time Observers”



Our visiting scholars will share their insights on life in China today
Sunday October 27, 2013 -
Time: 4:30 p.m. 


Featuring John Israel: Professor Emeritus; Modern Chinese History, University of Virginia, Baogang Guo: Professor; Political Science, Dalton State University and Hongmei Li: Assistant Professor; Communications, Georgia State University
  
Agnes Scott College: Teasley Lecture Hall in the Mary Brown Bullock Science Center
E. Dougherty St. Decatur, GA 30030

http://www.agnesscott.edu/maps-directions.html

Follow the signs that say "US-China Special Event.
For more information email - shkkse@yahoo.com