Photo de l'auteur

Chun Sue

Auteur de Beijing Doll

2 oeuvres 228 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Shu Chun, Chun Sue, Chun Shu

Œuvres de Chun Sue

Beijing Doll (2002) 227 exemplaires
La muñeca de Pekín (2003) 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
female

Membres

Critiques

LA MUÑECA DE PEKÍN

En clave autobiográfica, La muñeca de Pekin relata las andanzas de una adolescente rebelde y da voz a una nueva generación que busca amor y libertad en un entorno de alienación urbana y placeres efímeros.
Lin Jiafu, incapaz de soportar los rigores de un sistema educativo como Shangai baby de Wei Hu o Caramelo de Mian Mian, utiliza la promiscuidad sexual como elemento de afirmación personal y de occidentalización.

Escritora precoz y rebelde, Chun Sue encarna la búsqueda de amor y libertad en una sociedad atenaza por viejos miedos y prejuicios, y por una tradición que zozobra en la marejada materialista occidental.

La joven escritora explica con una sinceridad desesperada qué significa ser joven hoy en China cuando la formación que proporcionan las escuelas o la educación que transmiten los padres ya no sirven para
creer en un mundo mejor,
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
URBEZCALVO | Feb 6, 2018 |
Suorasanainen kuvaus nuoren tytön elämästä ja siitä, miten vaikeaa on sopeutua muiden joukkoon. Elämä ei ole helpoimmasta päästä ja arkipäiväiset ongelmat ja kamppailu on kuvattu kiinnostavasti.
 
Signalé
tira.kivilahde | 1 autre critique | Jan 15, 2014 |
Banned in China, this book is the "autobiographical novel" that tells the story of Chun Sue, a young woman coming of age right at the turn of the millennium. The book's cover purports that it is "uncensored, raw, and bloody," and that the narrator/protagonist seemingly holds nothing back. Maybe it's because I'm jaded, having come of age at roughly the same time as the author, but nothing in this book really shocked me all that much. Of course, China's society is far stricter than my own, so this book may well be more of a shocker there, but nothing that Chun Sue describes in this book is really all that different from the lives of so many American teenagers. If anything, I'd say she got off pretty light, as adolescences go.

I have a number of problems with this book, some of them purely technical. For one thing, the "autobiographical novel" designation doesn't make any sense to me. If it's autobiographical, wouldn't that make it a memoir? Also, the lack of cohesive story line and ultimate lack of resolution got tiresome. None of the "characters" are part of the story long enough for readers to come to care about them, and the story, such as it is, doesn't seem to arrive at any sort of conclusion. The book reads more like a teenager's diary than a real narrative, which I would be far more accepting of if there seemed to be an element of depth or even intrigue. No such luck.

On the other hand, this book might actually be good material for mothers looking to better understand their teenage daughters' angst and hormonal passion. Such topics are so much more palatable when they concern a third party rather than one's own daughter, so a reader might be able to examine Chun Sue's erratic behavior with somewhat more objective detachment. This isn't to say that Chun Sue's behavior really makes sense -- rather, her behavior seems rather typical of many girls her age, and might provide a window (albeit a narrow and somewhat hazy one) into the lives of adolescent Millennials (or whatever kids are called these days).

Overall, this book is highly forgettable, even when one is in the middle of it. Don't bother reading through to the end -- I assure you there is no reward or hidden gem in its conclusion, as I had hoped there might be.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Eneles | 1 autre critique | Dec 9, 2009 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
228
Popularité
#98,697
Évaluation
2.9
Critiques
3
ISBN
14
Langues
9

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