
“Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress” tells a story of two young men – in 1971 when Mao’s Cultural Revolution was at its peak – being sent to one of the villages in the mountain called Phoenix of the Sky for re-education. Â The irony is, during Cultural Revolution, there was not much education per se, except books authorized by the communists. Â This book is originally written in French, by Dai Sijie who was born in China in 1954 and has experienced 3 years of re-education and he is now living and working in France, since 1984. Â The political backdrop used in “Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress” hence appears as vivid, and authentic. Â I confess that I was too quick to criticize on Sijie’s treatment on the topic of premarital sex as being too inconsequential, too recreational. Â Almost too Western and too modern to my liking, given the fact that almost every word he wrote takes me back to China in the 70’s. Â But I was wrong. Â I am delighted to be wrong.
The two boys ”“ the narrator and Luo ”“ as part of the re-education program are required to perform hard labor such as carrying buckets of excrement up and down the mountain paths, working inside a coal mine, and working in a field with the buffalos supervised by the headman. Â The story told from the narrator’s perspective (and at times shift to other characters) is in contrary not gloomy at all. Â Outside the inevitable routine, this pair always manages to find interesting things to do. Â Soon, they have met the highly sought after and hence wealthy tailor who travels from village to village. Â And here is the author’s playful observation of how women love clothes.
Watching them during fittings, Luo and I were amazed to see how agitated they were, how impatient, how physical their desire for new clothes was. Â It would evidently take more than a political regime, more than dire poverty to stop a woman from wanting to be well dressed: it was a desire as old as the world, as old as the desire for children.
The tailor has a beautiful daughter, who is nicknamed as “Little Seamstress”. Â For Luo and Little Seamstress, there is romance. Â As for Little Seamstress and the narrator, there is friendship and love ”“ I think ”“ at a platonic level. Â The turning point of the story is Balzac. Â That is when the narrator, Luo, and Little Seamstress get hold of a stack of foreign literature.
Balzac is one of the French writers whose books were banned during the Cultural Revolution in China. Â The impact of these books to the trio is enormous. Â Those books slowly transform them into individuals who want to take free and independent actions, actions that lead them to desire, passion, and love. Â In contrast to the uniformity of the Chinese re-education (which I suppose is the whole point of such exercise), “Balzacian” re-education takes on an unexpected turn for each of the three characters. Â For the narrator, it is heroism, helping people beyond normal duty and means. Â For Luo, it is his desire to transform Little Seamstress from an unsophisticated mountain girl into a literate who reads and internalizes Balzac. Â For Little Seamstress, an awakening of what she is truly worth.
During my reading, I was so absorbed into the characters and the story not wanting this 172-page novel to end. Â I was expecting a political heavy novel but it is not. Â Instead, it is engaging, humorous, and there are enough twists to make the plot unexpected.
6 replies on “Balzac And The Little Chinese Seamstress By Dai Sijie – Playful, And Adorable”
Oooo… I wanted to read this book so.. much! In fact I wanted to read everything that is on the Vintage East list. I didn’t know this one was translated from French. I’ll just put this in my TBR list.
Beautiful review Wilfrid.
JoV – Thanks for your comment. It is a beautiful book. And I love. Do share with me what you think of this book. I am eager to hear 🙂
My review finally out! I watched the movie last Saturday and it was really nice although it didn’t stay true to the book. A bit annoying but still good.
http://bibliojunkie.wordpress.com/2012/02/23/balzac-and-the-little-chinese-seamstress-by-dai-sijie/
JoV – Love you review! All of a sudden, I have this urge to read other books of his.
Is there any other book of his? I didn’t know about that or maybe it’s in Mandarin?
Amelia – Yes, Once on a Moonless Night is another book of his 🙂
http://www.wilfridwong.com/2011/02/03/once-on-a-moonless-night-by-dai-sijie-a-more-complex-read-rewarding-nonetheless/