Can Xue
Rejecting the real world, she expels all outside forces to write of the
internal soul world. "I believe if you want to change the world, you have to
change your soul first," Can Xue added enthusiastically. Expressing distaste for
contemporary American literature, she added, "What I write dances from my heart.
The writer fights with the self, but you can't control yourself to write."
A Plant of China and the West
Can Xue blends aspects of Chinese culture with modern Western influences in
her works. "My works are like a plant," she explained.
"My ideas grow up in the West but I dig them up to replant in China's deep
soil, a rich history of 5,000 years. My works aren't like those from the West or
from China, bur rather my own creation. Chinese culture is from my heart. I was
born here. I live here. I don't need to learn what is from my heart."
Franz Kafka has been one of Can Xue's major influences
in her writing ever since his works were introduced to China in 1983. Can
especially enjoys The Castle. His early works, The Metamorphosis, are more
immature in her eyes. Can wrote an article in "The Great
Wall
" in her critical collection on Kafka,
entitled The Castle of the Soul. She thinks most Chinese critics wrongly claim
Kafka writes of realism and anti-capitalism. His stories, in her point of view,
are literature of the soul. Can Xue's other key inspiration comes from Borges's
works and Dante's The Divine Comedy.
Writing of the Irrational
Rather than focus on the socio-political in her works, Can
Xue prefers to write of the irrational, proclaiming "no one else is writing like
me in China." She draws the reader into a world of the grotesque and the
surreal, of uncertain spaces and indeterminate identities, of sexual menace and
psychological disorientation. These novellas are about life in post-Mao China,
but not the China of social realism or of Western fantasy. Like Yellow Mud
Street and Old Floating Cloud , her works explore Chinese reality
through images of the absurd, sudden, and illogical juxtapositions, and the
limitless transformations induced by a unique imagination.
Can Xue believes the darkness breeds the light. "Every human is a sinner. We
all have the potential for good and evil, darkness and light, for beautiful yet
complicated stories. But Chinese culture comes from my heart."
"I don't need to consciously learn what comes from my heart," she claims.
She holds a high opinion of her unique place in Chinese literature, yet she
maintains a balanced humility. She does feel some women writers are threatened
by her style, though she is friendly with Wang Anyi, possibly the most popular
woman writer in China now. Can Xue explained that her friend is popular "because
she is safer in her writing, but I disagree with how she promotes traditional
Chinese culture. It's not necessarily a good thing to please everyone."
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