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The
Dragon's Village
by
Yuan-tsung Chen
Reviews
- FOCUS
Magazine - The
New York Times Book Review
The
Dragon's Village is an autobiography of a young city girl who took part in
land reform in a remote mountain village as a teenager. This book will
engage students personally while giving them a firsthand account of how
the revolution developed. The protagonist chooses to remain in China after
the Communists assume power in 1949, while her family and fiancé flee to
Hong Kong. Her patriotism and dedication to the ideals of the revolution
are then tested as she finds herself alone with two other urbanites in a
remote peasant village, struggling not only with the hardships of life but
also with being a young woman in a male-dominated society. The moral
dilemmas of the revolution-- its complexity, excesses, and human
dimension-- are well portrayed in the book providing good background for
discussion.
Available
from:
Penguin Books USA
120 Woodbine St.
Bergenfield, NJ 07621
Price: $ 8.95 (paper)
The
Dragon's Village. An Autobiographical Novel of Revolutionary China.
by
Yuan-tsung Chen
Yuan-tsung
Chen was raised in a wealthy Shanghai family, educated in a Western
missionary school and grew up in as cosmopolitan a fashion as any Chinese
could in the years before 1949. In 1949 Chen, at the age of 17, found
herself facing a difficult choice. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) had
just achieved victory in the civil war and wealthy families such as hers
were fleeing the mainland of China for Taiwan, Hong Kong, and points
beyond. Many young people -- rich as well as poor -- found themselves
intoxicated with the opportunity to rebuild a once-great but now weak and
war-torn China. She chose to stay and within a year had volunteered to be
a land reform cadre in western Gansu province. The Dragon's Village is
essentially an account of that experience.
Chen
originally wrote up her experiences in Chinese during the 1950s. She
continued to write unpublished, as far as I can determine -- until the
beginning of the Cultural Revolution in 1966. Fearing she might be found
out and attacked for her writings, which did not adhere to the narrow
ideological guidelines of the period, she destroyed everything. In 1972
Chen, her son, and husband (Jack Chen, son of China's former Foreign
Minister Eugene Chen) came to the United States. It was here, after
several years of work on her English, that she rewrote and published the
Dragon's Village.
Objectives
In
the short time usually reserved for studying China, the vastness of its
civilization and history force teachers to be highly selective as to what
they will teach. The Dragon's Village can aid in that selection process,
for it succeeds in two crucial ways. First, the novel structure allows for
character development. There are no one-dimensional revolutionary heroes
here. Each individual is three-dimensional; down-to-earth; easily
identifiable; full of self-doubt, misgivings, and weaknesses in addition
to heroism. In many ways American students will find these people
recognizable and will readily relate to them. Consequently, I have found
students are anxious to finish the book in order to find out what happens
to the characters. This not only heightens interest but makes the story
less foreign.
Chen's
second success is equally important, for the story clarifies what I would
consider to be the most important characteristics of modern and
contemporary China:
This
book does not provide an instant course on China. Rather, what Chen has
accomplished in a thoughtful, clear, exciting, and at times, quite moving
way, is to touch on all of these themes.
A.
Tom Grunfeld
Empire State College
State University of New York
From FOCUS Magazine, Spring 1983
A
Talk with the Author /
An Author's Ordeal
Yuan-tsung
Chen is a tiny, vivacious and irreverent woman with an incongruously
booming laugh, but her voice drops to a whisper when she talks about her
year of excruciating hunger during China's Great Leap forward in
1959-60.The one-time pampered Shanghai girl had left her year-old son and
her husband in Peking to go to a remote northern province to prove that
she wanted to share the suffering of the peasants. She thought that the
books she took along would be her salvation, but after a few days of
back-breaking work in the blistering sun and bare minimum meals (a thin
pancake of rough cornmeal -- if she was lucky), she dreamed only about
food
Not
even her scorn for the excesses of the Cultural Revolution can diminish
the lesson of that terrible period. "What are human rights?",
she asked quietly. "The first human right is to eat." She tells
about that numbing experience in her autobiographical novel, "The
Dragon's Village," which Harrison Salisbury called "The Chinese
equivalent of Sholokhov's 'And Quiet Flows the Don.'" The heroine of
"The Dragon's Village" is Guan Ling-ling, an apolitical
middle-class Shanghai teenager, delighted to get a job away from home as a
librarian at the Central Film Bureau in Peking. A year later, she eagerly
shares in the new Communist government's initial step toward land reform
in 1951.
The
first time Yuan-tsung Chen herself "went to the countryside,"
she was only 19. She was staggered by the harshness of the peasants' lives
in Gansu province in northwest China and the poverty she shared with them.
She was one of a group of 70, but only four of five were Communists.
"We
went not because we understood Marxism, but to help the poor. Land reform
was a dream of many centuries, especially among the intellectuals,"
she said, as we talked in the modest frame home near Berkeley that she
shares with her husband, Jack Chen, an artist and author of "Inside
the Cultural Revolution" and "A Year in Upper Felicity." He
is a British citizen, born in Trinidad, son of a French Creole mother and
Eugene Chen, a British solicitor and crusading journalist who became
foreign minister, under Dr. Sun Yat-sen of the Wuhan Revolutionary
Government in 1927. They have lived in he United States since 1972, first
in Albany, NY, where Mr. Chen was consultant on Chinese studies for the
New York State Department of Education.
Yuan-tsung
Chen's original exposure to rural life lasted about five months. Later,
she would "go to the countryside" near Peking for a month or so
almost every year until she volunteered to join in the Great Leap Forward,
a time of terrible food shortages brought on by what she called the
government's mistaken policy of taking small plots of land away from the
peasants and offering no incentives to work.
Although
food was scarce then, the Chens were among the privileged. The Chinese
Foreign Press Office, which employed her husband, took care of its
valuable overseas workers. Additional food was brought to their home by
her sister-in-law and her American husband, J Leyda, the American film
historian.
But
Yuan-tsung felt guilty about the country's hardships. "I ate very
little for lunch. I tried not to eat eggs. Here an egg is nothing. There
it was a luxury. To easy my conscience, I volunteered to go to the country
again, this time for a year, and they sent me to northern Jiangsu
province. It was very hard to leave our baby. Later, I cursed myself when
I was in that mess. But since I survived it, I would not like to have
missed that experience. It was unique. Without it, I couldn't have written
that chapter, 'Spring Hunger' in my book."
As
a girl, when she had read about people starving and later gorging
themselves to the point of death, she couldn't believe it. Then something
similar happened to her the day before she returned to Peking form Jiangsu
province."
Several
villages invited us for a meal. It was not good food, but I ate, ate, ate.
I nearly died of over-eating. After I came back to our own courtyard, I
couldn't stand. I couldn't sit. It was awful, but when I heard there was
porridge in our canteen, I went to get some. I couldn't eat it. I just
wanted it."
The
hunger of that year haunts her. "I never forget those people. I felt
guilty and I'm still feeling guilty because I'm so lucky. One of the
reasons I drive myself so hard to write, to convey something to Western
readers, is because it eases my conscience that I'm not just sitting here
and enjoying myself. “She doesn't stay somber for long. Her
irrepressible sense of humor erupts in laughter as she tells her story,
interspersing it frequently with the phrase, "I am frank with
you" or "now here is my weak point -- I always have a very sharp
tongue." The first time she recalls using it was to lash out at her
family's older servants when they beat a younger one, a slave who used to
steal their belongings. Her mother had bought the girl "for maybe
nine silver dollars" because the child's father threatened to sell
her to a brothel. Yuan-tsung's family was not wealthy, but comfortably
well-off in the French quarter of Shanghai. Her father, sometimes a banker
and sometimes an engineer, had studied at Columbia University for six
year, and her mother had been educated at a missionary school. Yuan-tsung
was taught that her pretty face was less important than a well-developed
mind.
Even
as a child, her sharp eye didn't miss much when she observed the spoiled,
elegant selfish Shanghai women. "I think we were rather decadent in
Shanghai," she laughed. "It was a very strange world." Too
frail to attend school regularly, she immersed herself in books,
translated into Chinese: Dostoyevsky, Chekhov, Turgenev, Dickens and Zola.
She was nick-named "the little old lady." By the time she was
12, she had decided to have her own career as a writer because she never
saw a happy woman in her family's circle.
The
war years were spent mostly in Chungking, the nation's capital, but she
never recalled hearing anything about the Communist-led Eighth Route Army.
After she returned to Shanghai, with the Communists advancing on the city,
her schoolmates advised her to leave, but she already thought that Hong
Kong was too small for her ambitions.
She
had heard that a "writer could only grow in his own country, on his
own soil. At that time, I didn't know how tough the Communists could
be," she said. "Like a typical young person, I thought I could
deal with them."
Just
before the Communist take-over, one friend gave her a pamphlet, Mao's
"New Democracy," and advised her to "accumulate some
political capital." She never did. "They gave up on me,"
she said pertly, looking about half of her 47 years. "They always
criticized me but you can see they didn't do a very good job. I was never
interested in politics. Never or now."
She
loved her job as a translator of English-language books and articles on
film because it kept her in touch with the outside world. Later, during
the Cultural Revolution, she had access to the personal libraries of her
husband's friends in the Foreign Press Office, and she said with some
pride that she read the angry young men of England and the work of the
beat generation in the United States.
The
chapter in her book about Chinese writers -- whose real names are used --
is based on actual discussions at which she took notes. "Many of them
died in the Cultural Revolution, and the others are precious now [because
they are reinstated] to the new government. Nothing I wrote would hurt
them. They always talked a lot about how to write a good book and a good
play, but I realized I couldn't write that way. It was like collective
work."
Ai
Qing, one of the best contemporary poets, did influence her. "He read
my short stories and said, 'You have a rich imagination. The stories are
good, but I don't think we can publish them. In China, if you choose to
write, you have to prepare to go all alone sometimes.' A friend of his, a
French translator was having tea with us and he told me, 'Even when you
are alone, you should go on.'
"In
China, she pointed out, all the stories had to have formulas: "There
had to be a party secretary, a Communist. The Communist must be good. You
must speak certain things. If I describe the moonlight as beautiful, a
Communist must not think that way. He must think of something more
important. Moonlight is petty bourgeois."
Although
at times she tried to fit her stories to the formula, she didn't succeed
by Party standards. "I wrote about a girl who worked in a factory.
She tried to improve her work but she was not thinking only for the Party,
for the revolution. She was disappointed in love. She wanted to show she
was not the kind of old-fashioned girl who would stop her work just
because she was disappointed in love. But they didn't like it because you
should only think of work for the revolution, for a great ideal."
Her
hopeful novel "Sisters" about the economic struggle of a family
before 1949, was written along the accepted lines of "exposing the
old society," but it had no Communists in it. Despite this, the novel
was going to be published during the liberal "100 flowers of
thought" period, but they bloomed too briefly.
During
the Cultural Revolution, when her husband was attacked, reading became
even more important to them. One day, she borrowed a book about Tom Paine.
When the Chens learned how the American revolutionary was imprisoned by
the Jacobins and narrowly escaped the guillotine, they couldn't help
laughing. "I was comforted," she said, "that other people
were stupid like us."
That
thought didn't help the day the Red Guard cadre from the Foreign Press
office invaded her home and tore down Botticelli's "Birth of
Venus" which they called "decadent," and her husband's
early paintings. They confiscated precious art books, their sofa and
electric stove, as well as some jewelry that had mainly sentimental value,
and warned that they could return at any time.
As
soon as "the scoundrels" left, she burned the manuscripts of her
two novels and a collection of short stories she had hastily hidden."
Life
is more important than manuscripts," she said. "I didn't cry,
but I felt as if I was burning myself. I thought, 'I will remember
everything and some day, I will settle accounts with them.'"
The New York Times
Book Review, May 4, 1980.©1980 by the New York Times Company. Reprinted
by permission.
© Columbia
University, East Asian Curriculum Project
http://eacp.easia.columbia.edu
China: A Teaching Workbook