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![]() Family
Pa Chin (translated by Sidney Shapiro)
From
one of the most outstanding figures of modern Chinese literature . . . A moving,
colorful novel that reflects a period of great turmoil in Chinese history.
Originally written for and about educated Chinese youth in the 1930s, Pa Chin’s
political ideas formed from three Western ideologies: international anarchism,
Russian populism, and the French Revolution. These influences melded with his
personal exposure to civil wars, the early existence of the Communist Party in
China, the war with Japan, and the New Culture Movement to become the impetus
for this inspirational novel. Family is the story of the Kao family compound,
consisting of four generations plus servants. It is essentially a picture of the
struggle between the traditional and the modern, age and youth, Confucianism and
individualism—old China and the new tide rising to destroy it—as manifested in
the daily lives of the Kao family, particularly the three young Kao brothers.
The complex passions aroused in Family and in the reader are an
indication of the universality of human experience. Furthermore, anyone
interested in the society and history of modern China will be captivated by both
the plot and the vast amount of cultural materials displayed in this highly
celebrated novel. Olga Lang’s introduction and Sidney Shapiro’s smooth
translation elucidate the larger context of the times and the genius of Pa
Chin’s writing.
About the Author: Pa Chin (Li
Fei-kan) is one of the most outstanding figures of modern Chinese literature. He
was very popular in China during the 1930s and 1940s, especially among the youth
who were increasingly influential in Chinese political life in the twentieth
century. Pa Chin wrote fiction, literary essays, and political articles, but his
best works, and those that made him famous, were his novels describing the life
of educated Chinese youth. The most successful of these has been Family, which
forms the first part of his autobiographical trilogy,
Turbulent Stream. $9.50 list, 329 pages 10-digit ISBN: 0-88133-373-5 13-digit ISBN: 978-0-88133-373-2 © 1972 “Pa Chin’s Family—one of the most celebrated novels of the May 4th Movement—continues to be indispensable reading. Its clash of the traditional and the modern, of age and youth, of Confucianism and individualism remains relevant to any understanding of how China struggled, and continues to struggle, to escape the constraints of stifling orthodoxy.” William N. Rogers, II, Center for Asian Studies Table of Contents
Editor’s Note Introduction (Olga Lang) Family Preface to Chiliu (Turbulent Stream) Preface to the Fifth Edition
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