Lapse of Time is a 1982 Chinese novella by Wang Anyi. The novella follows Ouyang Duanli, a strong-minded Shanghai woman who worked hard to support her and her husband's large family during the Cultural Revolution when they were attacked as "former bourgeois".
Author | Wang Anyi |
---|---|
Original title | '流逝' |
Translator | Howard Goldblatt (1988) |
Language | Chinese |
Set in | 1960s/1970s Shanghai |
Publication date | 1982 |
Publication place | China |
Lapse of Time | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese | 流逝 | ||||||
|
It was translated by Howard Goldblatt and published in the 1988 anthology of the same name.
Reception
editKirkus Reviews praised the novella as having "the feel of a small epic yet never lapses into sentimentality or melodrama".[1] Noting the author's social background before the Cultural Revolution, Rosemary Haddon felt Ouyang Duanli was Wang's persona and wrote that "driven by the proletarian standard, Wang Anyi has won a small victory in China's class struggle".[2] Michael S. Duke, however, was highly critical of the novella for containing "all the major faults of Wang's writing: excessive wordiness, repetitiveness, unrealistic or stereotypical characterizations, overly abrupt changes in moral character, didacticism, and shallow moralizing".[3] Aamer Hussein also noted the "insipid" approach but called Wang's examination of relationships "moving and perceptive" and the novellas an "honest account of a woman's search".[4]
Awards
edit- 2nd National Novella Prize awarded by China Writers Association
Adaptation
edit- The Zhang Family's Daughter-in-Law, a 1985 film directed by Ye Ming, starring Li Lan
References
edit- ^ "Review: Lapse of Time". Kirkus Reviews. 1988.
- ^ Haddon, Rosemary (1989). "Review: Lapse of Time". Pacific Affairs. 62 (3): 444–5.
- ^ Duke, Michael S. (1989). "Review: Lapse of Time". World Literature Today. 63 (3): 535–6.
- ^ Hussein, Aamer (1989). "Catalysts of Change". Third World Quarterly. 11 (3): 217–9.