Mis/communication and identity in Chang Kuei-hsing’s novella Wandao. Lanhua. Zuolunqiang (1983)

  • Antonio Paoliello University of Milan-Bicocca

Abstract

This paper analyses Wandao. Lanhua. Zuolunqiang (彎⼑·蘭花·左輪 槍 Machete, Orchid, Revolver) (1983), an early novella by Taiwan-based Sinophone Malaysian (Sarawak) writer Chang Kuei-hsing (張貴興 Zhang Guixing) . A widely read and one of the most respected Sinophone authors, since the 1990s Chang has been known for writing both short and long fiction centred on the trope of the Bornean rainforest, often processing it by means of personal and literary memories. However, through a close reading of the novella, I demonstrate that such a trope was already present in his early writings, albeit in an unprocessed way, being the rainforest a crude environment as well as a shared site of inter-ethnic mis/communication between ethnic Chinese and Malays. Additionally, the novella is Chang Kuei-hsing’s only work of fiction that directly addresses the issue of national identity, thus urging us to examine the ‘Sinophone Malaysian writer’ label he has unproblematically been given, especially considering that the term ‘Malaysian’ most often refers to West Malaysia and marginalises the Bornean states of Sarawak and Sabah. The paper, therefore, seeks to promote a deeper understanding of the multiple factors that should be taken into account when investigating and categorising Sinophone literature by authors who are (or once were) Malaysians.

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Author Biography

Antonio Paoliello, University of Milan-Bicocca

Antonio Paoliello received his PhD in Translation and Intercultural Studies (with a focus on East Asia) from the Universitat Autònoma of Barcelona, where he also lectured in Chinese Literature and Classical Chinese. He currently is assistant professor of Chinese Language and Literature at the University of Milan-Bicocca. His research centres on Sinophone literature and film, with special attention to the relations between Sinophone Malaysian and Singaporean literatures and the wider Sinophone literary polysystem. His research articles on contemporary Sinophone fiction and cinema have appeared in international academic journals such as the Canadian Review of Comparative Literature, Open Cultural Studies and The Wenshan Review of Literature and Culture, among others. He can be reached at antonio.paoliello@unimib.it

Published
2021-04-28
Section
Articles