The Three-inch Golden Lotus: A Novel on Foot Binding (Fiction from Modern China): 15

The Three-inch Golden Lotus: A Novel on Foot Binding (Fiction from Modern China): 15

by David Wakefield (Translator), Feng Jicai (Author)

Synopsis

This beguiling story is woven around the life of Fragrant Lotus, who has her feet bound in the supreme Golden Lotus style when she is six years old. Her beautiful feet allow her to marry into a wealthy family, and with steady determination she jockeys her way to head of the household, strategizing through the intricate politics of foot-binding competitions and the turbulent times of the anti-foot-binding movement at the turn of the century. Events in Fragrant Lotus' life twist and unfold in a series of witty and often wicked ironies, obliterating easy distinctions between kindness and cruelty, the transcendent and the mundane, history and fable, forgery and authentic work. The novel's waggish narrator exists in the tension between judgment and description, wryly deflating his reader's certainties along the way. Feng's engaging storytelling technique effectively undercuts the broad simplifications with which we inevitably approach his novel. The act of foot binding is horrific, but it is also an act of love; the bound foot is a symbol of entrapment and oppression, but it is also an emblem of exquisite beauty and refinement. Written in 1985, The Three-Inch Golden Lotus is a deeply affecting, thoroughly enjoyable literary revelation.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 248
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Published: 01 Mar 1994

ISBN 10: 0824816064
ISBN 13: 9780824816063

Media Reviews
An excellent, truly engaging novel of high literary merit. Feng tells his story brilliantly, with a great deal of playful ironic distance, choosing foot binding as the means of investigating China's past as a comment on the present.-- The New Yorker
The translation by David Wakefield is noteworthy. While he follows Feng's text very closely, ... he strikes the necessary balance between readability and precision. As such, The Three-Inch Golden Lotus will be understood and enjoyed by a broad spectrum of educated readers.-- China Review International