Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
Culture
Home / Culture / Books

Light at the edge of darkness

By Zhao Xu | China Daily Global | Updated: 2023-07-11 08:25
Share
Share - WeChat
Zhang Lian in front of his little house in his native hamlet, where he lived between 1993 and 2005. KUANG LINHUA/CHINA DAILY

Unfiltered and intuitive

The fact that Zhang, who knows not a word of English, was able to draw immense inspiration from those Western writers came as a surprise to Liu during her 2018 trip. More than anything, it convinced her of the meaning of her translation, of which she had remained highly doubtful up to that point.

"When I was in university in China, I read the Chinese translation of Henry James' 1880 book Washington Square. Later, after my arrival in New York in 1987, I made a point of visiting the square, located in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Lower Manhattan. To my great disappointment, not much resemblance were to be found with the book, and, naturally, I blamed the translator and started to distrust all translations," says Liu.

Fully aware of the pitfalls of her task, during what she called "the most intense period" of the three years between 2018 and 2021 that she spent translating Zhang's poems, Liu was engaged in frequent WeChat exchanges with the poet on a daily basis.

"I probably wouldn't have devoted that amount of time to it if not for the pandemic. All that back-and-forth between us has allowed me a deeper look into the mental and emotional worlds of Zhang, who was surprisingly simple and sincere, and was nearly devoid of bitterness or cynicism, despite having overcome great adversities — both as a man and a poet," Liu says, alluding to his poems being interpreted by some literary critics in China as having anti-consumerism and anti-urbanization underpinnings.

"That to me would be their projection. Of course, Zhang wouldn't feel at home living in the city, but that doesn't mean he holds anything against the idea. He loves his land, and that love is passionate, intuitive, unfiltered."

Zhang remembers spending a snowy night at a friend's town center house around 2002. Unable to sleep, he walked onto the streets, only to find muddy vehicle tracks crisscrossing what would have been a thick white carpet. "The snow was being crushed and I could feel its pain," he says.

The reason he was there was to sell his self-published poetry collections, often by knocking on the doors of local cultural organizations. "Believe it nor not, 100,000 copies have been sold this way since 2000," says Zhang. "China, of all countries, has a history of poetry and a respect for poets."

That is something that Liu has always intended to convey to those around her. After the publication of the anthology, she was invited by her neighborhood library to give a lecture on the book. "People came up to me afterwards saying that China comes alive through the lines in the book. Even those who have been to Beijing and Shanghai asked if I could take them to see the country's vast hinterland.

"Throughout its history, China has had its fair share of pastoral poets, yet most were members of the literati class who approached their rural subjects with a sense of escapism, sometimes during forced or self-imposed exile. Zhang is different — he belongs, and therefore constitutes an antithesis to any pastoral idealism," Liu continues. "Unlike Shelley, and his fellow 19th-century English poets, Zhang's relationship with the land is characterized not by romanticism, but by a solid, true love."

The professor, who helped to bring the Confucius Institute to her college at the City University of New York, and served as the program's director from 2018 to 2022, traced Zhang's literary realism all the way back to Shijing, or The Book of Songs. Of its 305 works dating from the 11th to 7th centuries BC, 160 are believed to originally have been folk songs created by peasant-laborers.

For Gismondi, Zhang's depiction of his native land reminded him of the Great Plains of America, where, to use his words, "one has nothing but their surroundings". That sense of loneliness had once owned Gismondi, who spent a large part of his 38-year-long marriage taking care of his wife, who was mentally ill, until her passing two years ago.

"When I was in my 20s, I wanted to be a writer, but then life got in the way and I gave it up. Now it has come back to me," he says. "Zhang and I, we live in our own small worlds and probably will never meet. But it would be great if we do."

Back in February 1972, 12-year-old Gismondi watched in amazement as scenes of Chinese streets, with their endless flow of bicycles, were streamed into every US household during President Richard Nixon's historic visit. For him, Zhang seems to belong to a China that's more distant and more ancient.

Vestiges of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) Great Wall in Yanchi. CHEN JING/FOR CHINA DAILY

And, in a sense, he's right. Today, vestiges of the Great Wall, constructed during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), can still be seen rising slightly from the yellow ground of Yanchi, like the scaly back of an armored dinosaur that has fallen into a deep slumber. They are "the tail end of the Great Wall", according to Liu, the markers of a place where Zhang had lived and saw himself "becoming/a speck of twilight/by the tail of each bright day".

Ever since their meeting there in 2018, Liu has been thinking about returning. "He was solidly built with a square jaw and large hands, thick from years of labor," she wrote of her meeting with Zhang at the Yanchi train station. That was before the two sat down to talk in Zhang's living room.

"His voice is authentic. He's a real flower, growing from the cracked earth," she says.

 

|<< Previous 1 2 3   
Most Popular
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
主站蜘蛛池模板: 嫩草影院在线免费观看| 欧洲吸奶大片在线看| 国产免费丝袜调教视频| aa级毛片毛片免费观看久| 日韩av激情在线观看| 亚洲特级黄色片| 老少交欧美另类| 国产福利一区二区三区在线视频| 一个人看的www日本高清视频| 日韩在线播放全免费| 亚洲欧美成aⅴ人在线观看| 美女一级一级毛片| 国产成人久久av免费| 97久久精品人人澡人人爽| 成人毛片手机版免费看| 亚洲AV无码之日韩精品| 涩涩高清无乱码在线观看| 嘟嘟嘟www在线观看免费高清 | 国产一区二区三区精品视频| 骚包在线精品国产美女| 天天做天天摸天天爽天天爱| 中文精品字幕电影在线播放视频| 柳菁菁《萃5》专辑| 亚洲精品自在线拍| 精品长泽梓在线播放视频| 国产小呦泬泬99精品| 182tv午夜线路一线路二| 天天天天夜夜夜夜爱爱爱爱| 中文字幕aⅴ人妻一区二区| 日韩在线小视频| 亚洲人成精品久久久久| 猫咪免费观看人成网站在线| 嗯好湿用力的啊c进来动态图| 黄色a级片电影| 国产精品无码AV天天爽播放器 | 热久久综合这里只有精品电影| 四虎永久在线精品视频| 黄网站色在线视频免费观看| 国产精品女同一区二区| 99国产精品久久久久久久成人热 | 中文字幕韩国电影|