Socialism is Great! A Worker's Memoir of the New China by Lijia Zhang has a great cover.
The book is quite good too.
Socialism is Great! begins as Zhang's mom, a factory worker, has been offered ding zhi, an opportunity to retire early and give her teenage daughter her factory job. During the time of "iron rice bowls" and the relative uncertainty after Mao's death, being able to give her daughter a stable job (and getting out of the factory herself) was not something she could pass up. Thus, as China began its reform and opening in 1980, Zhang, a budding intellectual and book worm, found herself dropping out of high school early at the age of sixteen to begin a dirty government factory job.
The book is largely about Zhang's struggle with the hand she was dealt at her mindless factory job on the outskirts of Nanjing framed during a time of great change in China.
China had transformed almost overnight after Chairman Mao's death. Over were the days of memorizing the little red book. Replacing cultural revolutionary dogma was the opportunity for higher education, studying foreign languages, and the ability, to a greater degree, to choose one's own path.
Zhang was born with a free spirit and wanted more than anything to take advantage of the newfound freedoms afforded to her and the rest of her countrymen. But because of her circumstances, she was largely stuck while everyone and everything around her blossomed.
Zhang found plenty of adventure in time, though. She slowly broke free from the shackles of her factory and developed quite a nose for trouble and excitement. Her numerous romantic endeavors were pretty wild. I was shocked at some of the the tawdry affairs she describes with young bohemian men. Her entry into China's mid-1980's underground sub-culture is fascinating stuff.
Socialism is Great! is a really nice exploration of the bubbling intellectual movement that began in the early 1980s. It's a portrait of a China that I have not read much about. Zhang is a good writer that takes the reader through many unexpected twists and turns. It's a fun, fast read.
Get the latest China news, breaking China news, China business news, as well as information on China politics, China culture, and China military from the ...
Thứ Năm, 21 tháng 4, 2011
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Bài đăng phổ biến
-
As promised, I'm back with another food post! :) I'll start this post off with the ramen shop that my mum, sis and I went to las...
-
I've read a few different times that vimeo.com is a much more "artist-friendly" video sharing website than YouTube. I assume ...
-
The pace in which structures get built in China is staggering. Xi'an markedly changed in the three and a half years I lived there. I wou...
-
The Economist has a great map showing just how much China's economy has developed. Each province in China is labeled with the correspo...
-
Visiting hipster cafes has been one of the things that I really wanted to do after my A2 exams but unfortunately I didn't really h...
-
Qian and I went to an estate sale in our neighborhood yesterday. Qian saw an old box full of National Geographic magazines on sale for $5.00...
-
I have finished my photo book. It is titled - Expressing the Orient: A Photo Exploration of China . Here is the cover: Expressing the Orient...
-
Son of the Revolution by Liang Heng and Judith Shapiro is a first-person account of growing up in China during some of the most harrowing t...
-
Talks before Copenhagen's Climate Change Conference later this year are continuing to heat up . From The Wall St. Journal: China, in a n...
-
China had an interesting reaction to Obama's new treasury secretary nominee's criticism of its currency's value . From Bloomberg...
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét