Ba Jin has extended his influence well beyond the world
of literature. His novel, "Family," has become a required or selective reading
in university courses throughout the world on the history of China and East
Asia.
"I use Ba Jin's novel 'Family' in my history courses because it vividly
portrays the deep transformation in Chinese thinking during the May Fourth
period," John Flower, an instructor with the University of North Carolina at
Charlotte, said in his e-mail to China Daily.
"The novel is particularly good for giving a glimpse of the internal
struggles young people faced as they tried to understand and live by the new
ideals of individualism, personal liberation, social equality, and patriotic
nationalism introduced by publications of the New Culture Movement."
He said the novel brings to life that important period of modern Chinese
history. "My American students respond to it extremely well," he said.
Flower said he has chosen "Family" also because Ba Jin's personal experiences
mirror "the struggle of Chinese intellectuals over a long period of tumultuous
history."
"Ba Jin's long and influential life epitomizes the Chinese intellectual
tradition of serving as the 'conscience of society,'" Flower said.
"Perhaps his greatest legacy lies in his lifelong struggle to liberate both
the individual and the nation of China. Throughout his long life, Ba Jin
continued to struggle for truth, and for the ideal of the free individual,"
Flower said. "His legacy for world literature will be the universal theme of the
personal struggle to make an existential commitment to new values.
Flower added that he believes Ba Jin's work will long be admired and studied
by those eager to acquire an in-depth understanding of the history of modern
China, and by those who want to reflect on their own inner struggles.
Flower first read "Family" in the late 1980s. He said he was impressed by how
effectively the characters conveyed the broader themes of the May Fourth
Movement in very personal terms.
"Even more impressive to me, however, was the subtlety Ba Jin wrote into
those characters; they are complex, ambivalent, conflicted and therefore
convincing to readers everywhere," he said.
Indeed, a search on Ba Jin at www.amazon.com came up with his novel "Family"
in English, and quite a few readers' reviews.
"I was in a small bookstore one day many years ago and just happened to come
across Ba Jin's 'Family.' I started to read a few pages and became so interested
in it that I had to buy it," Judy Lind from the United States wrote in her
e-mail to China Daily.
"It is one of my favourite books," said Lind, who has written some 350 pieces
of book reviews on www.amazon.com.
She said she had no idea Ba Jin was still alive all these years. "Ba Jin's
'Family' is an excellent, absorbing account of one family in early 20th century
China," she wrote in her review on the Amazon website. "Through the conflicts
between the generations, we see the larger conflicts about to engulf the entire
country.
"The family is the Kao (Gao) clan, five generations living in one complex
headed by the Venerable Master Kao, the ultimate autocrat, monarch of all he
surveys within his walls, unwilling and unable to admit that his country and his
family are changing before his eyes. 'Family' is a totally absorbing account of
a family in crisis; on the one hand, we sympathize with the bind Juexin
(Chueh-Hsin) is caught up in as the oldest son, able to please neither his
elders who demand his total compliance with the family traditions nor his
younger brothers who need his assistance in their efforts to break free of the
confines of those traditions, and on the other hand we empathize with the
youngsters' efforts to live their own lives and realize their own destinies."
Another reviewer with the online moniker of DReese wrote: "I had to read this
book for a modern Chinese history class in college and found it very enjoyable.
It focuses on a time in time that many of us in the West do not really think
much about when the Chinese were wrestling with entering the modern world...
"The story, of the generational conflicts that exist as traditional family
roles are stretched by modernization, is also relevant in today's world," DReese
wrote.