Contenu de l'article

Titre Utopian Fiction and Critical Examination: The Cultural Revolution in Wang Xiaobo's “The Golden Age”
Auteur Sebastian Veg
Mir@bel Revue China perspectives
Numéro no 2007/4 China and its Past: Return, Reinvention, Forgetting
Rubrique / Thématique
China and its Past: Return, Reinvention, Forgetting
Résumé anglais The first novella in Wang Xiaobo's Trilogy of the Ages has in recent years become a genuine cult-work, in particular among Chinese students. The popularity of a text that links the sending-down of “educated youths” to the country with a golden age of sexual liberation in nature can certainly be explained in part by its scandalous aspects. However, it also conceals a sharply ironic discourse directed against the agrarian utopia of Maoism, which is associated with a regression to animal existence. From this perspective, Wang Xiaobo appears as an advocate of critical reflection, encouraging intellectuals to renounce political utopias and engage with society. His often polemical tone, when he refuses to regard past suffering as sacred, has in this way opened a precious space for discussion of the Cultural Revolution, a space that has so far proved elusive outside the area of fiction.