Saturday, July 17, 2021

The Contradictions of Doing That Thing

 “Hard Like Water,” by Yan Lianke, 2001

This is a satiric novel of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution in a backwater town in China, led by a somewhat intense ex-soldier who has returned to ‘make revolution.’   Aijun is a married man with delusions of grandeur, who meets and falls in love with a young married woman, Hongmei.  Their sexual attraction to each other is especially spurred by the hearing of certain revolutionary operas, which is one of the continuing jokes.  Sex and 'the revolution' are intertwined for them.  Aijun is intent on bringing the GPCR to his town, Chenggang, and having a career as a great revolutionary leader.  He had been promised a cadre job in the town by his wife’s father, the Party branch secretary, a former 8th Route Army PLA soldier.  When that falls through, he becomes intent on replacing the old man, becoming Party head and putting his young allies in positions of power.  In a way, it begins as an obvious battle of the young versus the old.

Aijun thinks in clichés derived from the writings of Mao Zedong, imagining that what he is doing is like the Long March; that the “east wind must prevail over the west,” that “revolution is not a dinner party.”  His first plan is to tear down an old arch entrance to the town, put there by its’ feudal founders.  He is stymied, as the fathers, mothers, grandfathers and grandmothers come out and stop the youth from wrecking the ancient arch.  His next plan is to expose his father-in-law, the local Party branch secretary, by finding trivial incidents or comments that incriminate him over his insufficient love for Mao and the Party. 

Aijun takes advantage of the suicide of his own wife in this way, as she damaged a bust of Mao in his house, tore down a Mao poster and soiled one of his Collected Works before hanging herself.  This becomes ‘a counter-revolutionary suicide’ - which incidentally also makes her father look bad.  Don’t laugh.  This and the 17 ‘denunciations’ Aijun has weaseled out of his young followers enables him to ‘overthrow’ her father, the old man.  One of the denunciations is he used a page from Mao’s sacred Quotations to roll a cigarette and gave another to his grandson to use in the toilet. 

After this Aijun becomes head of the local GPCR revolutionary committee; his beautiful, slim, alabaster helper Hongmei becomes #2.  Aijun’s job consists of putting up posters of Mao’s sayings all over town and in every house and tree, which is creepy in itself.  He mandates that all villagers memorize many Quotations, including school children who need not learn anything else.  This becomes a typical idealist exercise, substituting Mao’s sayings for Confucian or Biblical quotes and thus expecting reality to change.  Aijun is also in charge of the farm production brigades, which he has no clue about.  This food and production issue is the most concerning for the poor peasants of rural Chenggang.  Not for Aijun however.  He believes that hunger strengthens ‘the revolution.’

Burning some joss sticks to celebrate ancestors becomes a GPCR crime which Aijun uses to intimidate and then win-over the Cheng family, the most populous in the village, some of whose members had done it.  His long-range plan is to destroy the Chen temple in the center of town, starting with its musty, yellow documents, even though the building is protected as an historical monument.  After being stymied by the mayor, Aijun denounces him anonymously.  He also kills a witness to his affair.  And so it goes in a story of Maoist rhetoric and careerism.

This too-long story is sometimes told in the language of nature, using similes, personification and metaphors that give it an odd and humorous distance from reality. Everything in Aijun’s mind and every event is filtered through some revolutionary aphorism, giving it a grandeur it does not deserve.  In this way the author ridicules the events in town, including the arduous building of a secret underground tunnel by Aijun whose purpose is to facilitate sexual congress with Hongmei.  Ultimately Aijun’s illicit but passionate affair with the married Hongmei creates problems for ‘the revolution,’ even if their love-play also inspires new slogans.  In politics, sex is a stumbling block and the GPCR is no exception.

If you are an orthodox Maoist who believes the GPCR was some kind of perfect struggle against ‘capitalist roaders’ you will not like this book.  If you are an acolyte of the present Chinese CP, you won’t like it either. Lianke’s work is mostly banned in China as you might expect, though this prolific writer still lives in Beijing.  Lianke would have been 8 when the GPCR started and 18 when it ended, so he lived through it as a young person.  Most leftists familiar with Maoism will recognize many of the ideas in the book, which never let up.  If you want some insight into China during this period, including a level of dogmatic and ultra-leftist absurdities and barbarities, you might like it. The book is somewhat overlong but the ideological pokes and jokes keep coming, which helps a reader get through to the very dark end.

Prior blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 14-year archive of reviews:  “Maoism & the Chinese Revolution,” “The End of the Revolution,” “China’s New Red Guards,” “Russia and the Long Transition from Capitalism to Socialism,” “The Rise of China,” “Is the East Still Red?” “China – the Bubble That Never Pops,” “China 2020,” “From Commune to Capitalism,” “Jasic Factory Struggle,” “The Fall of Bo Xilai,” “Striking to Survive,” “Class is in Session,” “China on Strike” or the word ‘China.’

And I bought it at May Day Books!

Red Frog

July 17, 2021

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