Thirteen Steps (novel)

Thirteen Steps is a 1988 novel by Nobel prize-winning author Mo Yan. It first appeared in 1988 in the literary magazine Wenxue si ji. It later appeared in book form in April 1989.[1]

Plot

The protagonist is a madman locked in an iron cage. He relies upon the audience (or listeners) to feed him chalk so that he can prolong his own life and spit out tales of the miraculous and inconceivable about the lives of others.[2][3] Through these unreliable narrative bits and pieces, community histories are being reinvented, creating ”a grotesque and unpleasant aura” as it critiques the excesses of China’s capitalist development.[4]

References

  1. Riemenschnitter, Andrea (2012). "Mo Yan". In Moran, Thomas; Xu, Ye (eds.). Chinese Fiction Writers, 1950-2000. Detroit: Gale Cengage Learning. pp. 179–194. ISBN 9780787696450.
  2. Kang, Liu, ed. (1993-11-16). Politics, Ideology, and Literary Discourse in Modern China: Theoretical Interventions and Cultural Critique. Durham and London: Duke University Press. p. 87. ISBN 978-0822314165.
  3. Der-Wei Wang, David; Berry, Michael (2000). "The Literary World of Mo Yan". World Literature Today. 74 (3): 487–494. doi:10.2307/40155814. JSTOR 40155814.
  4. Chan, Ching-kiu Stephen (1992). "《放下屠刀成佛後,再操凶器便成仙:莫言<十三步>的說話邏輯》 "On the Logic of Discourse in Mo Yan's The Thirteen Steps". In Ping-leung, Chan (ed.). Studies in Modern and Contemporary Chinese Literature. Hong Kong: Joint Publishing. pp. 1–15. ISBN 978-9620409738.


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