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Red Rose, White Rose (Zhang Ailing)

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Red Rose, White Rose
AuthorAiling Zhang (Eileen Chang)
LanguageChinese
SubjectsFiction, Literature
GenreNovel
PublisherPenguin Books Ltd
Publication date
15 February 2011
Publication placeChina
ISBN9780141196145

Red Rose, White Rose (Simplified Chinese: 红玫瑰与白玫瑰; traditional Chinese: 紅玫瑰與白玫瑰), is a widely circulated novella written by Zhang Ailing, a well-know women writers in Chinese literature. The novel first published in 1944 and later included in her short-story collection Chuanqi (1944; “The Legend”).[1] In 1994, by Hong Kong director Stanley Kwan (Simplified Chinese: 关锦鹏; traditional Chinese: 關錦鵬; born October 9, 1957), the novel was adapted into the movie of the same name Red Rose White Rose, which was widely acclaimed and entered into the 45th Berlin International Film Festival.[2].

Set in the 1930s and 1940s Chinese society, the story focus on the tangled love between Tong Zhenbao and two important women in his life, one he called his white rose, the other his red rose, [3] which respectively represent his spotless wife Yanli and passionate mistress Jiaorui. With finely detailed writing, the novel explores the women's survival status and tragic fate and loss of self-conscious in a patriarchal society and describes the ordinary people's emotions and marital status under the collision of Chinese traditional culture and Western culture.[4]

Summary

“ Maybe every man has had two such women-at least two. Marry a red rose, and eventually she'll be a mosquito-blood streak smeared on the wall, while the white one is “moonlight in front of my bed.” Marry a white rose, and before long she'll be a grain of sticky rice that's gotten stuck to your clothes; the red one, by then, is a scarlet beauty mark just over your heart. ” [3]As the most eye-catching quote in this novella, from the very beginning, a simple classic metaphor is used to portray men’s greedy desires for women. However, Tong Zhenbao thinks he is different. Returning from studying in France with excellent grades, Zhenbao was hired by a famous foreign trading company in Shanghai as a senior staff. In his respect, he is an ideal modern Chinese man. [3] For the convenience of transportation, he rents a room from his classmate Wang Shihong. Shihong has a beautiful charming wife named Jiaorui.

On the day Zhenbao moved into the room and met her, he was deeply fascinated by this rose-like woman. He picked up her stray hairs from the floor tiles and twisting them together, then “stuffed it into his pocket. His hand stayed there, and his whole body tingled.” [3]Once, Shihong went to Singapore on business. After several spiritual and physical struggles, on a rainy day, they broke the moral bottom line and fell in love. However, when Jiaorui told Zhenbao that she confessed to her husband and was planning to divorce to marry him, Zhenbao flinched. He hesitated, annoyed, and eventually fell ill. [5]In the ward, he explained to her that their love can only be the love of friends; he cannot give up his entire life, his family, and his friend because of what happened between them. After hearing these hypocritical words, Jiaorui wiped her chaotic teardrops, without looking at him once,[3] walk out of his life from then on.

Under the arrangement of Zhenbao's mother, he met his white rose and got married soon. Different from Jiaorui, Yanli is a traditional and gentle Chinese woman. Nevertheless, shortly after marriage, Zhenbao thinks her was insipid and dull, so he began to visit prostitutes.[5] What makes the situation more horrible is when he discovered his wife was carrying on a clandestine love affair with a tailor who was inferior to him, he became more unscrupulous in his philandering outside. One day, he happened to meet his “red rose” Jiaorui, she remarried and had a child in her arms, seemingly old and withered. Finally, one night, Zhenbao was conscious of that time waits for no one. The roses, whether red or white, become the phantom of reality. The next day Zhenbao rose and reformed his ways. He made a fresh start and went back to being a good man.[3]

Main Characters

Tong Zhenbao 佟振保

Zhenbao is a model of modern Chinese men. He rises from poverty and got a degree from abroad. With excellent performance, he became a senior staff in a foreign trading corporation. In these years, he works conscientiously, raises his mother, supports his brother; and even gained a great reputation as “Lucia Hui” for rejecting his first lover Rose's sex temptation during the time of study away in France. However, a man who looks so perfect has failed in the emotional world.[6] On the one hand, he loves the spirit and flesh of the red rose Jiaorui, but for the secular obstacles and traditional views on marriage, he has to refuse to marry her; on the other hand, he loves the white rose Yanli's unsullied reputation but extremely dislikes her vapidity after marriage. Therefore, whether in love or marriage, he feels very painful and tortured.

Wang Jiaorui 王娇蕊

Jiaorui was an overseas Chinese from Singapore,  when she was studying in London, was quite a party girl. She and Wang Shihong, Zhenbao's classmate, got married in London. [3]Like a red rose, she is ebullient, bright, and charming. The appearance of  Zhenbao lets her understand the meaning of love. Then she summoned up all her courage, told the truth to her husband and filed for divorce to marry her true love. However, her bravery was cruelly rebuffed by Zhenbao with some hypocritical explanations. Even so, she did not shrink back from betrayal but leave Zhenbao's world without looking back.[5] Years later, she remarried and has a child, leading a stable life like an ordinary woman. When Zhenbao met her by chance, she was no longer as dazzling as a red rose as before.

Meng Yanli 孟烟鹂

Yanli is Zhenbao's wife, also is the white rose in his life. Coming from a traditional Chinese family, she is innocent, obedient, and well-behaved. Although she has been to university, there is no change in her rigid mind or conservative ideas. All these conditions just meet Zhenbao's requirements for a wife. [4]For Yanli, her husband is her God, and she always says “Wait and ask Zhenbao about it” or “Better take an umbrella, Zhenbao said it's going to rain.” [3]Due to her dull personality, Zhenbao feels increasingly bored and goes out to visit prostitutes. Besides, her mother-in-law also gradually disliked her because she only gave birth to a daughter. To find an outlet in the unbearable family life, she has an affair with a tailor. However, after the adultery was revealed, she felt ashamed and being more humble to ask her husband's forgiveness.

Background of the novella

Historical background

The novel was first published in the year of 1944. Setting in the 1930s and 1940, Shanghai was still under Japanese occupation. As an imperialist colony, various old values were shaken by the collision of new ideas here.[7] Among them, the values of marriage and love bore the brunt of the impact. Traditional values of marriage have been broken, and people began to pursue freedom and liberation. However, the incomplete ideological revolution disconcerts people's choices of marriage. At the same time, under the influence of the feminist movement around the world, the call to promote equality between the sexes has been continuously strengthened. Although the objective fact of male-dominated society has not changed in China, this also gave birth to a small group of women with independent ideas. Therefore, in the context of this era, the love between men and women described by the author Zhang Ailing is always rebellious, failing and sophisticated, and the novel Red Rose, White Rose is also considered as one of her responses to the feminist consciousness.[8]

Writing inspiration

Reflecting the decline of the old culture in this novel, Zhang's original intention is not to criticize and lash out, but to show the real tragedies and comedies of ordinary people on the stage of the times. In 1971, Zhang Ailing mentioned the novel Red Rose, White Rose in an interview with the Taiwan writer Shuijing, saying, "After writing this story, I feel very sorry for Tong Zhenbao and White Rose. I have met both of them. But of Red Rose, I have only heard of her."[9] Later, she also introduced to a friend that:  "The hero is a friend of my mother. He told my mother and aunt about this matter. At that time, I was a child, and he thought I didn’t understand. Who knows that I'd remember it all?" [10] According to Zhang, it can be seen that the original idea of this novel may come from the true story that her has heard. Then, based on her rich imagination and exquisite writing, the work was born. As for the prototypes of the characters, it is beyond investigation now.

Themes of the novella

Literary critics

Notable quotes

  • "Maybe every man has had two such women-at least two. Marry a red rose and eventually she'll be a mosquito-blood streak smeared on the wall, while the white one is "moonlight in front of my bed." Marry a white rose, and before long she'll be a grain of sticky rice that's gotten stuck to your clothes; the red one, by then, is a scarlet beauty mark just over your heart."
  • " And yet the average man's life, no matter how good, is only a "peach blossom fan." Like the loyal, beleaguered beauty in the story, you bang your head and blood drips on the fan. Add a few strokes of ink, and the bloodstain becomes a peach blossom. "
  • "Jiaorui hid her eyes with her hand. "Actually, it doesn't matter. My heart's an apartment." "So-is there an empty room for rent? " Jiaorui didn't answer. "I'm not used to living in an apartment. I want to live in a single-family house." She gave a little grunt of disbelief. "Well," she said, "let's see if you can tear one down and build the other!"
  • "Once you've learned to do something, you can't just put it aside and give it up."
  • " The mind of a child and the beauty of a grown woman: the most tempting of combinations."
  • " The next day Zhenbao rose and reformed his ways. He made a fresh start and went back to being a good man."[3]

See Also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Liu, Chuane (2000). 张爱玲传. Beijing: 北京十月文艺出版社. pp. 89–101. ISBN 7530206036.
  2. ^ "Programme 1995". www.berlinale.de. Retrieved 2021-04-15.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Zhang, Ailing; Kingsbury, Karen S (2011). Red rose, white rose. ISBN 978-0-14-197050-9. OCLC 931694306.
  4. ^ a b Yang, Chun (May 2016). "Deep Structure of Red Rose and White Rose". Journal of Shandong Women's University. 127 no.3: 73–78.
  5. ^ a b c Cui, Yinghui (Aug 2010). "The Feminine Tragedy in Red Rose and White Rose by Zhang Ailing". Journal of Luoyang Normal University. 29 No. 4: 88–90.
  6. ^ Sun, Ruixue (2003). "Fantastic Amour-propre- Symptomatic Analysis to ZhangAiling's Red Rose and White Rose". JOURNAL OF SHANDONG NORMAL UNIVERSITY (Humanities and Social Science). vol. 48 no.4: 48–51. {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  7. ^ Zhang, Juan (Sep 2011). "Aesthetic Values of Modern Citizen Novels in the 1930s and 1940s Shanghai". 南通大学报(社会科学版). vol. 27: 79–83. {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  8. ^ Sang, Deborah Tze-lan (2016-10-13). "Eileen Chang and the Genius Art of Failure". The Oxford Handbook of Modern Chinese Literatures. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199383313.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780199383313-e-39#p765. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  9. ^ Shui, Jing (2000). The Art of Eileen Chang's Novels. Taiwan: 台北大地出版社. pp. 21–30. ISBN 9789578290198.
  10. ^ Song, Yilang (2018). 张爱玲私语录(Zhang Ailing's Private Sayings). Beijing: 北京十月文艺出版社. pp. 47–53. ISBN 978-7530215036.

Bibliography