Like Father, Unlike Son
Jonathan Spence
- ‘I Love Dollars’ and Other Stories of China by Zhu Wen, translated by Julia Lovell
Columbia, 228 pp, £16.00, September 2006, ISBN 0 231 13694 3
What does it mean to live morally in an uncaring society? The question is deeply embedded in any culture that has an enduring creative legacy, and China is no exception. For some years, especially from the late 1940s until Mao’s death in 1976, the question was sidestepped as the Party imposed its own vision of Soviet-inspired socialist realism. But for the generation of Chinese born during the 1940s, who reached adulthood in the mid-1960s during the fiercest years of the Cultural Revolution, the question reappeared with new insistence. Extremist left-wing ideologies were discredited, relaxed sexual mores began to reassert themselves, and the possibilities of political participation were probed once more.
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Vol. 29 No. 17 · 6 September 2007 » Jonathan Spence » Like Father, Unlike Son (print version)
Pages 12-13 | 2404 words