Bamboo Shoots After the Rain: Contemporary Stories by Women Writers of Taiwan

Front Cover
Ann C. Carver, Sung-sheng Chang
Feminist Press at CUNY, 1990 - Fiction - 232 pages

A short story collection hailed as a "welcome and valuable addition to our growing knowledge about the inner lives and literary talents of Chinese women" (Amy Ling, author of Between Worlds: Women Writers of Chinese Ancestry).

This remarkable anthology introduces the short fiction of fourteen writers, major figures in the literary movements of three generations, who represent a range of class, ethnic, and political perspectives.

It is filled with unexpected gems such as Lin Hai-yin's story of a woman suffering under the feudal system of Old China, and Chiang Hsiao-yun's optimistic solutions to problems of the elderly in rapidly changing 1980s Taiwan. And in between, a dozen rich stories of aristocrats, comrades, wives, concubines, children, mothers, sexuality, female initiation, rape, and the tensions between traditional and modern life.

"This is not western feminism with an Asian accent", says Bloomsbury Review, "but a description of one culture's reality. . . . The woman protagonists survive both despite and because of their existence in a changing Taiwan."

 

Selected pages

Contents

Shame Amah
3
Candle
17
The Chignon
26
A Pair Of Socks With Love
32
Challenging Boundaries and Affirming the Will
45
In Liu Village
47
Chairman Mao is a Rotten Egg
83
Vase
103
A Women Like Me
134
Individual and a Rapidly Changing Society
147
The Mulberry Sea
149
Two Very Short Stories
167
The Aftermath of the Death of a Junior High Coed
171
Journey to Mount Bliss
188
Can One Read CrossCulturally?
210
Selected Bibliography
217

The Ritual of the Clay Idol
115
Flower Season
125
Permission Acknowledgments
231
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