Rejection of Postmodern Abandon: Zhu Tianwen’s Fin-de-siecle Splendor
     Author : Shu-chen Chiang
 Keywords : neo-traditionalism, neo-nativism, third cinema, postmodernism, deconstructed binaries, postcolonialism, the abject, sublimity, desire
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This essay first situates Zhu, in the history of “literary gendering” in Taiwan, as a follower of Zhang Ailing, Taiwan’s “literary mother” who stood over against the Iterary father, Lu Xun.
While her critics claim that Zhu has rejected such postmodernist, politicized feminist concerns as selfhood, economic autonomy and sexual awakening in her writing, returning instead to an
implicitly apolitical, traditional Mainland Chinese lyricism, it is
argued here that they misunderstand the author, particularly in
her most recent phase. For Zhu has moved from neotraditionalism to neo-nativism: as we see in her fiction (Splendor)
and her screenplay for the Taiwanese film City of Sadness, she is indeed in touch with the most avant-garde “postmodernist”
currents, breaking down such binaries as China/West, colonizer/colonized, tradition/modernity, ego/desire, unity/chaos. This highly sophisticated reading of the author brings into play recent postcolonial theory, “third cinema,” Lyotard’s, Kristeva’s
and Deleuze’s views on sublimity, chaos, abjection and desire. Her critics’ claim that Zhu is somehow “ahistorical” or “apolitical” misses this author's (very contemporary) complexity, her negotiation of a space “in-between.”