Chinese Science Fiction and the Search for Lost Time


DATE
Wednesday April 13, 2016
TIME
12:00 PM - 12:00 PM

About the Event

When Liu Cixin’s novel The Three-Body Problem won the Hugo Award for Best Sci-Fi Novel in 2015, global readers showed a sweeping interest in its Chineseness: how did a Chinese author master a genre so underdeveloped in his home country? Liu Cixin seems to have connected with a genuinely enthusiastic global readership, and Tor, the leading sci-fi publisher, is rushing to get the translation of the final volume of the Three-Body trilogy out this year. Mo Yan may have won the Nobel Prize for Literature, but Liu Cixin enjoys fame and fans.The Three-Body Problem

This talk argues that the Chineseness of the Three-Body trilogy lies in its representation of memory and history. Three-Body presents an impending destruction to human civilization by aliens, but the crisis turns out to be rooted in historical trauma of 20th century China: the Cultural Revolution. Yet the trilogy’s subtitle, rendered in English as Remembrance of Earth’s Past, indicates its connection to a different, literary genealogy: Marcel Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past. Liu Cixin’s characters, in search of lost time, turn a futuristic narrative into an intensely nostalgic one. The future, no matter how hostile or alien, is but a continuation of the past—and human history a continuous gaze back.

About the Speaker

Wu, Meng holds an MA degree in Comparative Literature from the University of Western Ontario and is currently a fourth-year doctoral student in Asian Studies at the University of British Columbia.

Please RSVP here.



TAGGED WITH