With the strong development of Reform
Movements, the voices of reforming literature grew louder. Exposure novels,
represented by Li Boyuan's (1867-1906) The Bureaucrat: A Revelation and
Wu Yanren's (1866-1910) Strange Events for the Last Twenty Years,
deliberately chose focus on reformism and expose the corruption of the
government and the crimes committed by capitalist countries. Liu E's (1857-1909)
The Travels of Lao Can, another exposure novel appearing in this period,
also uncovered social reality in the late Qing Dynasty through describing the
experiences of a doctor. A Flower in an Ocean of Sin, by Zeng Pu (1871
-1935) was one of the more valuable of the novels created in the late Qing
Dynasty. The novel satirized the corrupt way of life of the "highbrow" scholars.
Lao Can You Ji (The Travels of Lao Can), written by Liu E (1857-1909), is partly
autobiographical and was published in a periodical. Lao Can is an itinerant
doctor who during his journey through Shandong encounters the evils that
suppressive bureaucrats put on guiltless people. Through his good connections to
official circles, Lao Can succeeds in punishing at least one of the bad
officials. In a vivid language, Liu E depicts scenes full of life, like the two
dancing girls in the second chapter, and in a fantastic winter landscape. The
book is a source for the daily life of peasantry in late Qing times.
Liu E was a poet, musician, medical
practitioner and entrepreneur, as well as a novelist. He was also the earliest
serious collector of oracle-bone inscriptions. He was a native of Jiangsu
province and the son of a minor official, but himself decided against a career
in the civil service and became involved in various enterprises, many with
foreign interests. He was exiled to Xinjiang in 1908, on trumped up charges, and
died the following year.
Niehai Hua (A
Flower in the Sea of Sins) was written by Zeng Pu (1872-1935) and was published
in 1905 as a writing of social criticism. The novel, full of citing from
traditional literature and thus very difficult to understand for people that are
not familiar with antique literature, is influenced by Western literature. Some
of the heroes are veiled representations of real persons, making this novel a
real critic of intellectual and courtier life.