The famous play is set in a typical,old Beijing Teahouse and follows the lives of the owner and his customers through three stages in modern Chinese history .The play spans fifty years and has cast of over sixty characters drawn from all levels of society. Teahouse bids an inspired,lingering farewell to old Beijing and the old society.despite their evils and ills ,and extends a passionate welcome to the new society with its promise if freedom and equality of the people
Tweetalige Serie in Moderne Chinese LiteratuurReeks
Deze serie duikt in de rijkdom en nuances van de moderne Chinese literatuur via een zorgvuldig samengestelde selectie van werken. Het biedt inzicht in de diverse stemmen en stijlen die het Chinese literaire landschap vormgeven. Lezers kunnen verhalen verkennen die maatschappelijke transformaties en culturele evolutie binnen China weerspiegelen. Elk deel biedt een unieke literaire reis.





Aanbevolen leesvolgorde
The Shop of the Lin Family & Spring Silkworms
- 200bladzijden
- 7 uur lezen
Mao Dun published both of these short stories, "The Shop of the Lin Family" and "Spring Silkworms, " in 1932. The first tells the story of a shop selling foreign goods in a small town in China, which Zhu Ziqing considers the best work written by Mao Dun. The second is about a silk weaver, Old Tong Bao, who takes very good care of his silkworms, until the armed conflicts caused by the Japanese in Shanghai in 1932 ruined his business. The stories are available here for the first time in traditional Chinese characters.
Teahouse
- 108bladzijden
- 4 uur lezen
This volume is set in a typical, old Beijing teahouse. Lao She's drama follows the lives of the owner and his customers through three stages in modern Chinese history. The play spans fifty years and has a cast of over sixty characters drawn from all levels of society. Brought together in Yutai Teahouse, they reflect, through the changes that were taking place in Chinese society.
Set in a typical, old Beijing teahouse, this drama follows the lives of the owner and his customers through three stages of modern Chinese history spanning 50 years