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Balzac

Essay by   •  December 21, 2010  •  634 Words (3 Pages)  •  1,499 Views

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Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress, translated from the original French (the book was a bestseller in France) is a tale centered on, of all things, the Cultural Revolution of China's Chairman Mao Zedong. Anyone who takes for granted the freedom from government that Western cultures enjoy would do well to read this book. But this wonderful novel (novella really) is not about politics,except in a cursory way; nor is it a treatise on the evils of China during the reign of Chairman Mao. It is, instead, a gentle, wise and humorous tale of two teenaged friends, young boys, and of a young teenaged girl, theseamstress of the title, whose striking beauty charms them both.

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress reads like an amalgam of a Grimm's fairy tale and a story by the great writer of realism, Guy de Maupassant (rather than the title-named Balzac). Certainly the ending is not unlike the endings in many a Maupassant tale in its surprise and its quietly humorous perversity.

Luo and his friend, the narrator of the book, are young boys taken from their homes (as were many during the Cultural Revolution) and sent to a remote village to be "re-educated". During the "revolution" all the universities were shut down and any boy or girl who was labeled an "intellectual" (which meant any child who went to high school) was sent to the countryside to learn and live the life of peasants. The two friends are banished (in effect) for their crime of finishing high school to a village near a great mountain called the "Phoenix of the Sky".

There is humor in the tale, such as the fact that Luo brings with him a clock, shaped like a rooster, by which he keeps time. The village has never before seen an alarm clock and so the object obtains the status of a small idol. Luo takes advantage of that by changing the time now and then so as to gain an extra hour's sleep from a headmaster who depends upon the clock to tell him when to send the boys out to work. The work the boys must do is grinding, physical and filthy labor for which they are not paid. They work for the good of the "revolution". It's no wonder

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