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In 1989, as the Chinese authorities cautiously began opening up to the West, Xinran presented a new radio program in Nanjing called "Words on the Night Breeze." It provided a forum to discuss various aspects of daily life, using her own experiences "to win the listeners’ trust and suggest ways of approaching life’s difficulties." Later, with the authorities satisfied by her discreet handling of controversial topics, she was allowed to add a carefully vetted call-in hotline to the popular program. Drawing on her encounters with listeners, Xinran explores such topics as the role of religion in women’s lives (they seem to believe simultaneously in a number of different creeds) and lesbianism (a particularly controversial subject). Sexual abuse, especially incest, too often goes unpunished, she states, illustrating with the example of Hongzue, a teenager who found refuge from her father’s abuse in being hospitalized for various illnesses and, fearful of being sent home cured, deliberately contracted a fatal infection. To underline the pervasively callous treatment of women, especially during the Cultural Revolution, Xinran tells the story of young Shilin, who suffered a breakdown while watching her family being assaulted and was then sent to be "re-educated" in a remote village where she was frequently gang-raped by soldiers. The author also describes her own childhood spent in the care of her grandmother while her parents were away in the army. Her mother, a brilliant technical designer and early revolutionary who was home so infrequently thather daughter called her Auntie, was denied recognition for her achievements because she was the daughter of a capitalist, a "black class" background she shared with Xinran’s father.
An important document that records with intelligent sympathy lives warped or destroyed by political revolutions.
| Prologue | xi | |
| 1 | My Journey Towards the Stories of Chinese Women | 1 |
| 2 | The Girl Who Kept a Fly as a Pet | 8 |
| 3 | The University Student | 36 |
| 4 | The Scavenger Woman | 53 |
| 5 | The Mothers Who Endured an Earthquake | 67 |
| 6 | What Chinese Women Believe | 88 |
| 7 | The Woman Who Loved Women | 94 |
| 8 | The Woman Whose Marriage Was Arranged by the Revolution | 110 |
| 9 | My Mother | 119 |
| 10 | The Woman Who Waited Forty-five Years | 129 |
| 11 | The Guomindang General's Daughter | 152 |
| 12 | The Childhood I Cannot Leave Behind Me | 170 |
| 13 | The Woman Whose Father Does Not Know Her | 185 |
| 14 | A Fashionable Woman | 205 |
| 15 | The Women of Shouting Hill | 226 |
| Epilogue | 240 | |
| Acknowledgements | 243 |
1. Do you think that Xinran's mission with the Words on the Night Breeze and The Good Women of China, can ultimately be traced back to her own problematic relationship with her mother, and her absent father?
2. In her prologue, Xinran tells of when she risked her life fighting an attacker for her bag, as it contained her only finished manuscript. Would you do the same? Is life more important than a book?
3. How far do you accept the old Chinese saying that woman's nature is like water and man's nature is like mountains? Consider to what extent this applies to both Western and Chinese cultures.
4. Do you think Xinran agrees with the water/mountain comparison by the end of her stories? Consider this in the light of her use of imagery, and how these two motifs are used within the text.
5. Looking back at The Woman Who Loved Women story, do you think that if Taohong had not been raped she still would have found herself only able to love women? Is she really homosexual or just badly scarred?
6. It might be said that in some way Xinran is worthy of criticism for choosing to settle in England, leaving the women of China to a world that is still so behind Western standards of equality. Do you agree?
7. Which of the stories did you find most disturbing, and why?
1. Do you think that Xinran's mission with the Words on the Night Breeze and The Good Women of China, can ultimately be traced back to her own problematic relationship with her mother, and her absent father?
2. In her prologue, Xinran tells of when she risked her life fighting an attacker for her bag, as it contained her only finished manuscript. Would you do the same? Is life more important than a book?
3. How far do you accept the old Chinese saying that woman's nature is like water and man's nature is like mountains? Consider to what extent this applies to both Western and Chinese cultures.
4. Do you think Xinran agrees with the water/mountain comparison by the end of her stories? Consider this in the light of her use ofimagery, and how these two motifs are used within the text.
5. Looking back at The Woman Who Loved Women story, do you think that if Taohong had not been raped she still would have found herself only able to love women? Is she really homosexual or just badly scarred?
6. It might be said that in some way Xinran is worthy of criticism for choosing to settle in England, leaving the women of China to a world that is still so behind Western standards of equality. Do you agree?
7. Which of the stories did you find most disturbing, and why?
lyra580
Posted February 19, 2011
This book helps to learn about China history, people and culture by reading simple people very sad stories. Couldnt put id down. I recommend this book together with Zachary´s Mexico ¨China Undeground¨.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted March 10, 2003
In this collection of absolutely gripping true stories from women, predominantly from rural China, the author draws on a vast reservoir of first-hand reports and gives voices to women who usually go unheard in the public forum and unnoticed in history. Their experiences are all the more shocking because they're not intended to be--the pain, waste, sadness and sacrifice in their lives underscore the turmoil of China's recent past and volatile present. For students of China, and anyone visiting or doing business with China, as well as for avid readers of all persuasions, YOU MUST READ THIS BOOK NOW--don't wait for it to come out in paperback! I had frankly decided to read no more of the 'my-family-suffered-in-China-and-I-survived' books (of which there are so many excellent ones), but when I heard Xinran in a TV interview describe how she came to write this book, I became curious. When I started reading it, I couldn't put it down except to dry my tears. I was a student in China in 1979 and I thought things were better today, but I discovered how naive that assumption is--I can't believe the injustices against women in the 80's and 90's!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted June 6, 2011
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Posted April 3, 2011
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Posted March 19, 2012
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Posted August 14, 2011
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Overview
When Deng Xiaoping’s efforts to “open up” China took root in the late 1980s, Xinran recognized an invaluable opportunity. As an employee for the state radio system, she had long wanted to help improve the lives of Chinese women. But when she was given clearance to host a radio call-in show, she barely anticipated the enthusiasm it would quickly generate. Operating within the constraints imposed by government censors, “Words on the Night Breeze” sparked a tremendous outpouring, and the hours of tape on her answering machines were soon filled every night. Whether angry or muted, posing questions or simply relating experiences, these anonymous women bore witness to decades of civil strife, and of halting attempts at