Stubborn Weeds: Popular and Controversial Chinese Literature After the Cultural Revolution

Author(s):  
Perry Link
1984 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 498
Author(s):  
Richard King ◽  
Perry Link ◽  
Helen F. Siu ◽  
Zelda Stern

2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 289-301
Author(s):  
Lelia Mabel Gándara

Abstract “Scar Literature,” a literary movement in twentieth-century Chinese literature, encompasses a series of works written after the Cultural Revolution. The scar metaphor was taken from the title of a short story, “The Scar,” and characterized a series of works with common features. The outlines of “Scar Literature” are blurred, mixed and intertwined with other literary trends and movements. But while Chinese and foreign literary criticism claim that it was short-lived, its influences are visible in several works by contemporary authors. Based on the idea that literary works are prone to being analyzed as a form of persuasive discourse, this paper identifies typical rhetorical procedures of this literary trend and its influences in certain emblematic works: the recurrence of topoi (figures such as “rehabilitation,” peculiar to the Cultural Revolution); inductive reasoning (the construction of a historiographic reasoning via the exemplum); recourse to pathos; and the metaphorical figure of the scar bearing the value of the plotline. This analysis applies concepts of New Rhetoric and discourse linguistics, in particular, concepts developed by Olbrecht-Tyteca and Perelman, Amossy’s approach about pathos and the role of emotions and “figurality” in argumentation, and Plantin’s linguistic theory of the emotions.


1994 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-101
Author(s):  
Britt E. Towery

This paper analyzes the distant though pertinent relationship the modern Chinese writer Lao She (1899–1966) had with the principle of self-supporting, self-governing, and self-propagating Chinese Christian churches. He became a Christian in Peking (Beijing) in 1922. This “people's artist” was hounded to his death by the Red Guards in the Cultural Revolution. A pioneer in modem Chinese literature, his work revealed the language, the joys, and the hurts of the common people of China. He believed his country and its Christianity needed to be Chinese-led, and not dependent upon the foreigner for funds and direction.


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