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The Old Capital: A Novel of Taipei (Modern Chinese Literature from Taiwan)
 
 
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The Old Capital: A Novel of Taipei (Modern Chinese Literature from Taiwan) [Hardcover]

T'ien-hsin Chu (Author), Howard Goldblatt (Translator)

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Book Description

0231141122 978-0231141123 April 3, 2007

Chu T'ien-hsin's The Old Capital is a brilliant evocation of Taiwan's literature of nostalgia and remembrance. The novel is centered on the question, "Is it possible that none of your memories count?" and explores the reliability of remembrances and the thin line that separates fact from fantasy.

Comprised of four thematically linked stories and a novella, The Old Capital focuses on the cultural and psychological realities of contemporary Taiwan. The stories are narrated by individuals who share an aching nostalgia for a time long past. Strolling through modern Taipei, they return to the lost, imperfect memories called forth by the smells and sensations of their city, and try to reconcile themselves to their rapidly changing world.

The novella is built on the memories and recollections of a woman trying to make sense of herself and her homeland. After a trip to Kyoto to meet with a friend, she returns to Taipei, where, having been mistaken for a Japanese tourist, she revisits the sites of her youth using a Japanese colonial map of the city. Seeing Taipei anew, the narrator confronts the complex nature of her identity, embodied in the contrast between a serene and preserved Kyoto and a thoroughly modernized and chaotic Taipei.

The growing angst of these narrators reflects a deeper anxiety over the legacy of Japan and America in Taiwan. The titles of the stories themselves-"Death in Venice," "Man of La Mancha," "Breakfast at Tiffany's," "Hungarian Water"-reveal the strong currents of influence that run throughout the collection and shape the content and texture of the writing. In his meticulous translation, Howard Goldblatt captures the casual, intimate feel of Chu T'ien-hsin's writing while also maintaining its multiple layers of meaning. An intertextual masterpiece, The Old Capital is a moving and highly sensual meditation on the elasticity of memory and its power to shape personal identity.

(4/15/2007)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

T'ien-hsin's impressive collection reveals a society's inner conflicts over everything from politics to sex, but especially identity. In "Death in Venice" the reader is taken through the creative process as the narrator becomes wrapped in his own story's mechanics. "Man of La Mancha" and "Hungarian Water" both center around philosophical inquiries into death and identity. In the first, a man worries about the mundane contents of his wallet, which prompt him to make mundane adjustments to what he carries. In the other, two men reminisce about the women they've known in an attempt to postpone and "outlast" the inevitable. The young narrator in "Breakfast at Tiffany's" spars with an older writer who is trying to understand the city's "new humans." The title novella (a rewardingly complex second-person tale) speculates on the reliability of memory as a woman revisits the changing urban scenes of her youth, leaving her to wonder "What is this place?" Goldblatt's expert translation captures the subtleties of competing Eastern and Western influences. The result is an accomplished and intelligent portrayal of Taipei's cultural evolution. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Like her sister Chu T'ien-wen (Notes of a Desolate Man, 1999), Chu T'ien-hsin writes formidably intelligent, erudite fiction about educated post-World War II generation Taiwanese. Fluent in Japanese as well as Taiwanese (Japan long occupied Taiwan) and able to visit Japan but not the mainland, this cohort finds cultural touchstones in Japanese literature and world cinema, which the narrators of the five pieces in this book habitually cite as they nostalgically contrast then and now. A writer searches for the right coffee shop in which to work, lamenting those he used to write in that have changed. Another writer nearly faints in the street, and the incident divides his life. A female executive becomes an authority on diamonds as she weighs buying one for herself. Two men develop an acquaintance based on recalling scents from their pasts. The old capital of the titular short novel is Kyoto, Japan, whose relative preservation a disillusioned woman obsessively compares to the constant change of booming Taipei. Dense, demanding, and quite possibly unforgettable. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Heydon't worry, nobody dies and nothing happens. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
nightshade trees, primal vitality, citronella oil, colonial map
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Dadu Road, Valentine's Day, Meiji Bridge, Chen Weiying, Zhu Meijun, Maruyama Park, Long Island, Wei Sheng, Frank Lloyd Wright, Tamsui River, Keelung River, Togetsu Bridge, Heian Shrine, Fuyou Temple, Roosevelt Road, Yasaka Shrine, South Pacific, Star of the South, New Year, Guanyin Mountain, Crown Prince, Qingguang Market, Linqi Street, Taiwan Shrine, Imperial Hotel
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Front Cover | Front Flap | Table of Contents | First Pages | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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