Red Poppies
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Red Poppies: A Novel of Tibet (Chinese: 尘埃落定) is a novel published in 1998, whose theme is based on the Tibetan custom and traditions. The novel consists of 12 chapters with a total of 481 000 Chinese characters. The author is a Tibetan called Alai, an editor of Science Fiction World. In 2000, Red Poppies won the Mao Dun Literature Prize.[1]
Summary
The novel set in Ngawa, Sichuan chronicles the stories of a Tibetan Tusi and his family from 1920s to 1949, which gives a general introduction to the economic development in Ngawa, the territorial disputes among Tibetan chieftains and the fights for throne succession.
Main Characters
Family of Tusi Maiqi
- The first-person narrator: considered as an 'idiot', the second son of Tusi Maiqi, mother is a Han Chinese
- Tusi Maiqi: father of the first-person narrator
- Mother: the second wife of Tusi Maiqi, a Han Chinese woman as a gift given to Maiqi by a merchant trading furs and herbs
- Brother: the eldest son of Tusi Maiqi, son of Maiqi's first wife, considered as the successor of Tusi Maiqi
- Sangji Zhuoma: maid of the first-person narrator
- The lame butler
- Weng Bo Yi Xi: Lama of Gelug
- Suo Lang Ze Lang: attendant of the first-person narrator
- Yang Zong: used to be the woman of the chieftain Zhazha, belongs to Tusi Maiqi after Zhazha's death
- Lama Menba
- Sister: half-blooded, shares the same father with the narrator, lives in London
- Uncle: Tusi Maiqi's younger brother, trades in India
- The silversmith: later marries Sangji Zhuoma
Other Characters:
- Special commissioner Huang: an official of the national government
- Tusi Ronggong: a female Tusi
- Tana: the beautiful daughter of Tusi Ronggong
- Tusi Laxueba
- Tusi Wangbo
Comments
Comments by the selection committee of the Mao Dun Literature Prize: 'The novel narrates from a unique viewpoint, with a rich connotation of Tibetan culture. A slight of fantasy enhances the artistic expression. The writing style is light, charming and poetic.'[2]
Adaptations
TV series: TV series Red Poppies was first shown in 2003
Dance drama: Red Poppies was adapted into a dance drama by Hong Kong Dance Company in 2006.
References
- ^ "茅盾文学奖"尘埃落定"(Red Poppies won the Mao Dun Literature Prize)". china.com.cn.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "论《尘埃落定》的象征意蕴(The symbolical implication of Red Poppies)". www.xzbu.com. 11 May 2012. Archived from the original on 22 March 2017.
External Links
See also
Category:Mao Dun Literature Prize laureates
This article, Red Poppies, has recently been created via the Articles for creation process. Please check to see if the reviewer has accidentally left this template after accepting the draft and take appropriate action as necessary.
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