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Novelist and Playwright
ACT Theatre, February
24, 2001
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Novelist and playwright Gao Xingjian was virtually unknown to Western
readers until he became Chinas first recipient of the Nobel Prize
for Literature in 2000. Gao was born in 1940 in the Jiangxi province of
eastern China. His parents were avid readers, particularly of Western
literature translated into Chinese, and encouraged Gaos reading
and journal writing from an early age. After studying in state schools
and earning a university degree in French, Gao began work as a writer
and painter in Beijing.
Like other intellectuals and artists, Gao faced political repression during
most of the 1960s. Fearing imprisonment, he burned all of his writings
when the Cultural Revolution broke in 1966 and spent the next several
years writing in secret. He reemerged publically in the early 1980s with
the publication of a collection of essays and several plays, all of which
were eventually banned. In 1982 Gao began writing a novel that would become
his masterpiece, Soul Mountain. I realized it wasnt
worth it anymore to be writing plays for the public. So I decided to work
on a novel for myself so I could avoid the criticisms of the authorities,
to be able to write an entirely personal book without thinking that it
would be published, said Gao.
A year later, Gao was incorrectly diagnosed with lung cancer. Resigned
to death, he spent six weeks indulging his appetites and reading philosophy.
Eventually, he discovered the misdiagnosis; however, a new threat arose
when rumors began to circulate that he was to be sent to a prison farm
because of his controversial writing. Gao left Beijing and disappeared
into the remote forest regions of Sichuan, and then spent five months
following the course of the Yangtze River out of China. His amazing 15,000
kilometer sojourn forms the basis of Soul Mountain.
The autobiographical novel, which was completed in 1989, recounts a dual
journeya literal journey into the heart of China and a spiritual
journey of the self. In Soul Mountain, Gao blends fiction, philosophy,
history, and fable to create a rich and extraordinary work. Soul Mountain
was elegantly translated into English over the course of a decade by the
renowned China specialist Mabel Lee.
Gao Xingjian is the author of eighteen plays, two novels, and several
works of literary criticism. All of his works have been banned on the
Chinese mainland since 1985. In addition to Soul Mountain, The Other
Shore, a collection of five of his plays, has been translated into
English and is available in the United States. Gao lives in Paris where
he also works as a painter.
Excerpt
Taken from Soul Mountain (2000)
It is a fine
day with not a trace of cloud in the sky and the vault of heaven is amazingly
remote and clear. Beneath the sky is a solitary stockade with layers of
pylon houses built on the edge of a precipitous cliff. In the distance
it looks quite beautiful, like a hornets nest hanging on a rock
wall. The dream is like this. You are at the bottom of the cliff, walking
one way and the other, but cant find the road up. You can see yourself
getting closer and then suddenly you are moving further away. After going
in circles for quite some time you finally give up and just let your legs
carry you along the mountain road. When it disappears behind the cliff,
you cant help feeling disappointed. You have no idea where the mountain
road beneath your feet leads but in any case you dont actually have
a destination.
You walk straight ahead and the road goes around in circles. Actually,
there has never been a definite goal in your life. All your goals keep
changing as time passes and as locations change, and in the end the goals
no longer exist. When you think about it, life in fact doesnt have
what may be called ultimate goals. Its just like this hornets
nest. Its a pity to abandon it, yet if one tries to remove it one
will encounter a stinging attack. Best to leave it just hanging there
so that it can be admired. At this point in your thinking, your feet become
lighter, it is fine wherever your feet take you, as long as there are
sights to see.
Selected
Works
The Other Shore (1999)
Soul Mountain (2000)
Web
Site Links
Gao's Nobel lecture
An interview
with Gao
Book review
of Soul Mountain
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