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Gao Xingjian: Aesthetics and Creation PDF

271 Pages·2012·0.8 MB·English
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Gao Xingjian Aesthetics and Creation G X ao inGjian A c esthetics And reAtion translated by Mabel Lee Cambria Sinophone World Series General Editor: Victor H. Mair Amherst, New York Copyright 2012 Cambria Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior permission of the publisher. Requests for permission should be directed to: [email protected], or mailed to: Cambria Press University Corporate Centre, 100 Corporate Parkway, Suite 128 Amherst, NY 14226 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Gao, Xingjian. [Essays. English. Selections] Gao Xingjian: Aesthetics and Creation / Gao Xingjian; translated by Mabel Lee. pages cm – (Cambria Sinophone world series; series editor: Victor H. Mair) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-60497-836-0 (alk. paper)    I. Lee, Mabel, translator. II. Title. PL2869.O128A2 2013 895.1’352—dc23 2012043741 Table of Contents Introduction by Mabel Lee................................................. vii Chapter 1: The Position of the Writer...................................... 1 Chapter 2: The Art of Fiction............................................... 21 Chapter 3: The Potential of Theatre....................................... 41 Chapter 4: The Aesthetics of the Artist................................... 65 Chapter 5: Another Kind of Aesthetics.................................... 89 Chapter 6: Dramaturgical Method and the Neutral Actor............. 159 Chapter 7: Concerning Silhouette/Shadow............................... 179 Chapter 8: Environment and Literature.................................. 189 Chapter 9: Ideology and Literature....................................... 207 Chapter 10: After the Flood............................................... 221 Chapter 11: Freedom and Literature...................................... 227 References.................................................................... 237 Index.......................................................................... 241 Introduction by Mabel Lee Aesthetic Dimensions of Gao Xingjian’s Fiction, Theatre, Art, and Filmmaking Born in 1940 during the Japanese invasion of republican China, Gao Xingjian received his formal education under the People’s Republic of China that was established on 1 October 1949. When the totalitarian decade of the Cultural Revolution ended in 1976 with the death of Mao Zedong, Gao Xingjian was amongst a cohort of young unpub- lished writers to suddenly rise to prominence. In his first book, Xiandai xiaoshuo jiqiao chutan (A Preliminary Exploration into the Art of Modern Fiction; Guangzhou: Huacheng, 1981) he drew on examples of the great writings of China and Europe to support his claim that human qualities should be restored to characters in literature. Whereas older Chinese intellectuals were still reeling from the trauma of severe physical and psychological abuse perpetrated against them for more than a decade, Gao Xingjian had the audacity to criticise the hero or villain stereotypes demanded of socialist-realist propaganda literature that was designed viii Gao Xingjian Aesthetics and Creation to educate the masses. The heroes were to provide exemplars for the masses to imitate, and the villains were to teach the masses how to iden- tify “criminal” behaviour in people, so that such people could be immedi- ately reported to the authorities. The book earned him celebrity status in intellectual circles, a status that was consolidated when his plays Juedui xinhao (1982; tr. Absolute Signal, 1996) and Chezhan (1983; tr. The Bus Stop, 1996; also tr. Bus Stop, 1998) were staged before wildly ecstatic audi- ences at the People’s Art Theatre in Beijing. The sensational staging of Absolute Signal was reported internation- ally by foreign journalists who were in Beijing to observe the unfolding of events as China emerged after many years of self-imposed isolation from the rest of the world. However, though the Cultural Revolution had ended, the custodians of China’s socialist-realist literary and art traditions continued to wield power at the highest levels of the nation’s cultural and propaganda infrastructure. In “Geri huanghua” (1991; tr. “Wilted Chrysanthemums,” 2006) Gao recalled that in early 1983 he was summoned to appear at writers’ rallies where he was denounced as the “insignificant author” of a booklet that was causing young writers to deviate from the nation’s socialist-realist traditions. A number of veteran writers spoke out in his defence, and the meetings failed to achieve the expected outcome. Thus emboldened, Gao went on to stage his second play, Bus Stop, which was banned after the tenth performance. With the passage of a few months, the arbiters of cultural policy had gained the necessary backing at the top political echelons, and Gao Xingjian heard from reliable sources that he was to be sent to some labour camp in Qinghai Province for reeducation. He did not wait to be sent but immediately fled Beijing, remaining away for several months until the campaign had run its course and it was safe for him to return. His short- story manuscripts, which had been shelved in the interim, were released for publication. However, during the staging of his play Yeren (1985; tr. Wild Man; 1990) at the People’s Art Theatre, actors were individually cautioned against performing in any future Gao Xingjian productions. In 1986 his play Bi’an (1986; tr. The Other Shore, 1999) was stopped during Introduction by Mabel Lee ix rehearsals, and the publication of a collection of his short stories was blocked. In Beijing the authorities continued to pursue a vendetta against him, but at the same time his plays began to find audiences in Yugoslavia (1984), England (1987), Hong Kong (1987), and Sweden (1987). At the end of 1987 Gao relocated to Paris, where he began to work feverishly to recoup the lost decades of his creative life. He found new publishers in Hong Kong and Taiwan, and to date he has published a total of seventeen plays, a large number of which have also been published in other languages, including English, French, Swedish, Korean, and Japanese, and have been staged in various countries on five continents. Since 1992 he has personally directed several of his own plays, the most ambitious being his grand opera Bayuexue (2000; tr. Snow in August, 2003), which involved Peking Opera performers, a symphony orchestra, percussionists, and a choir; it was staged in Taipei in 2003 and in Marseille in 2005. Also of note is that he directed the production of his play Quatre quatuors pour un week-end (1998; tr. Weekend Quartet, 1999) at Comédie Français in 2003. Gao has seen the publication of his autobiographical novels, Lingshan (1990; tr. Soul Mountain, 2000) and Yige ren de shengjing (1999; tr. One Man’s Bible, 2002), that of his short- story collection, Gei wo laoye mai yugan (1989; tr. Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather, 2004), and their publication in French, English, and Swedish, as well as in numerous European and Asian languages, Arabic, and a number of Indian languages. Gao’s artworks have also flourished, and he has held fifty major solo exhibitions throughout Europe and in various cities in Asia and the United States, the most recent being La Fin du Monde (Ludwig Museum, Koblenz, 2007), Between Figurative and Abstract (Snite Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame, Indiana, 2007), Depois do dilúvio (Sintra Museum of Modern Art, Lisbon, 2008), and Gao Xingjian (iPreciation Gallery, Singapore, 2010). His exhibitions have been accompanied by the publication of catalogues. At present he is devoting much of his time to innovative filmmaking, an ambition he harboured since the early 1980s, when he was still in Beijing. His films Ceying huo yingzi (Silhouette/Shadow, 2006) and Honghuang zhi hou (After the Flood,

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Nobel Laureate Gao Xingjian is amongst the most challenging writers of the present era. He has probed the dynamics of Chinese and European literature and developed unique strategies for the writing of seventeen plays, two novels, a collection of short stories and a collection of poems. He has also w
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