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The Story of the Stone, or The Dream of the Red Chamber, Vol. 1: The Golden Days Paperback – March 30, 1974
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Divided into five volumes, The Story of the Stone charts the glory and decline of the illustrious Jia family. This novel re-creates the ritualized hurly-burly of Chinese family life that would otherwise be lost and infuses it with affirming Buddhist belief.
For more than seventy years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic literature in the English-speaking world. With more than 1,700 titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best works throughout history and across genres and disciplines. Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators.
- Print length540 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPenguin Classics
- Publication dateMarch 30, 1974
- Dimensions0.97 x 5.13 x 7.8 inches
- ISBN-100140442936
- ISBN-13978-0140442939
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- Publisher : Penguin Classics; Trade Paperback Edition (March 30, 1974)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 540 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0140442936
- ISBN-13 : 978-0140442939
- Item Weight : 13.1 ounces
- Dimensions : 0.97 x 5.13 x 7.8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #84,435 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,660 in Family Saga Fiction
- #2,528 in Classic Literature & Fiction
- #6,032 in Literary Fiction (Books)
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The other reviews on Amazon summarize the book well. Some of them comment on the translation's accuracy, which I cannot do, being too feeble in my Chinese to follow its difficult prose. There are several things to add, however.
I'm currently reading it for the 3rd time (I have also read the abridged translations), with an eye to studying the ways emotion is represented, for some work on emotions across cultures that I am involved in. The interesting thing here is that the whole incredibly diverse, elaborate, and minutely described emotional landscape of the novel is instantly and totally accessible and comprehensible to a sensitive western reader (at least, to with some knowledge of Chinese conventions). There is nothing remotely like the utterly alien, incomprehensible emotional and personal landscape that stereotypes and superficial western accounts ascribe to the Chinese. There is also nothing like the utterly socialized Chinese, incapable of individuality, seen in most western accounts of cross-cultural psychology. In fact, Cao's characters are sometimes quirky, sometimes downright eccentric, and always individuals and characters. This is (of course) a much more accurate portrayal of Chinese persons than the stereotyping western literature.
The western reader is even apt to do as Chinese readers often do, and identify Cao's characters with people they know. Cultural psychologists take note.
First is the stunning level of social commentary here, focused tightly and relentlessly on the plight of women in a traditional elite North Chinese household, but also on the plight of the servant and commoner classes in that elitist situation. Cao Xueqin explores every possible misfortune that can befall good women (including being corrupted into not-so-good women).
Cao was humorous and gently ironic. The brilliant but feckless and unpredictable hero Bao-yu survives largely because of his infinitely caring, sensible, always-there maid and lover Aroma. Several of the other characters also depend on servants who are conspicuously more sane and competent than their masters and mistresses.
Nobody in the English-language literature seems to point out that this was part of a movement. The great poets Zheng Xie and Yuan Mei were exact contemporaries of Cao Xueqin. Cao would probably have known their work. They had the same socially critical stance. They had the same highly empathetic attitudes toward women, including women of the servant class. If the latter phrase sounds very feudal and hierarchic, reflect, American readers: our poets and novelists are very often elite New Englanders and New Yorkers; you know they have servants; yet it will be a cold day in Hell before you find a sympathetic portrait of a maid in any of their stuff. Cao is way ahead.
Zheng and Yuan were also capable of the same sort of intensely personal, intimate, open writing about love that Cao managed so well. There is a wonderful translation of one of Zheng's more painful and personal love poems in V. McHugh and C. Kwock, WHY I LIVE ON THE MOUNTAIN, a booklet that should be more widely known--alas rare and obscure.
Moreover, this humanistic attitude--toward women, or just toward everybody--spread to Japan; think of Rai Sanyo and Ryokan. I doubt if they ever heard of Cao, but they surely had read Yuan Mei and very likely had read Zheng and others.
There were a good number of women writers at the time. Some were proteges of Yuan Mei. No one seems to know what happened to the women in Cao's own personal life.
Chinese society in the early Qing Dynasty was horribly hierarchic and oppressive, not least to women, but the countercurrents represented by Cao and others were powerful and important. They lie behind modern women's movements in East Asia.
What makes this translation truly exceptional (and the reason it is so much better than the English "translation" by Yang Xianyi and Gladys Yang) is because it can stand on its own as a work of literary art. Hawkes' masterful prose makes the reader feel like the book was originally written in English (despite the content letting you know that it's a very different world) because of how smooth and stylish it is. He is able to not only convey the words, but the mood, tone, and feel of the book, which is very hard to do, especially with something so complex as "Story of the Stone." He took some liberties with the translations of some of the poems (of which there is a lot in this novel), but they flowed naturally in English while still retaining, by and large, their original meaning and intent. Again, that is not something easy to do, not to mention his ability to handle nearly 300-year-old Chinese humor and 'playfulness' of word games and subtle foreshadowings. David Hawkes is clearly one of the most exceptional (if not THE most exceptional) translator of Chinese literature into English that I have ever encountered. His "Introduction" in Volume I is also one of the best overviews of the novel ever written.
Of course, the novel itself, translation aside, is sheer brilliance. Its vast scope, ability to engender so many different (and genuine) feelings in the reader, all of the ups and downs. It could be said that Cao Xueqin writes like a painter. His insane attention to detail and description makes the reader feel like they are really there, standing in that elegant and opulent mansion or in Prospect Garden. It is said, though, that to truly start to understand "The Story of the Stone," you have to read it at least five times. I would also strongly suggest that those who fall in love with this novel, as I have, spend some time looking for other scholarly books and articles related to the novel, because there are so many complex layers involved, and you may even find a greater sense of closure (particularly if you don't read the last two volumes, which were a forgery, not written by the original author of the first 80 chapters, who had a quite different ending in mind).
Top reviews from other countries
The 18th century saga, which is believed to be based on the author’s own life and intended as a memorial to the twelve Nanjing women that he knew in his youth, maps the rise and fall of two closely-related noble families. The characters, profligate by nature, waste away the immense ancestral wealth in frivolous activities, and often times find themselves on the wrong side of the law. Imperial authorities confiscate the family properties once their misdeeds come to light. After much tragedy, the family is eventually restored to its former position by the Emperor. And in-between all this fateful happenings, the great passions and follies plays out in full flow, which in a contrasting manner are set against the backdrop of the Karmic Law that lays emphasis on the intemperance of life on earth. Overall, the book is full of details relating to the social, cultural and spiritual life of the time.
The Penguin translation was titled “The Story of the Stone” based on the novel’s frame story in which a sentient heavenly stone is sent to earth to live out the drama of human passion (one of the main characters, Jia Bao Yu, is born with a jade in his mouth thereby suggesting that he was the sentient stone sent to earth by two enigmatic Taoist and Buddhist priests). I still wish the Penguin had gone with the title “Dream of the Red Chamber” instead of “The Story of the Stone”. I think the title “Dream…” conveys a better sense of the underlying theme than the “Stone…”.
The novel has some spectacular supernatural elements. Volume 1 has some good dose of the supernatural, but in sharp contrast, Volume 2 is completely devoid of it. Volume 3 has one or two sequences. It picks up pace in Volume 4 and reaches the zenith in Volume 5. The dreams, nightmares, premonitions, seances, and apparitions can spook anybody and borders on the horror genre. However, all the sequences are so beautifully blended into the narrative in such a way that they don’t feel out of place. Somehow, all those supernatural elements feel “real” like how one would feel the happenings in a dream as “real.” That is the big success of this novel.
When the going is good, none of the characters pay heed to any of the superstitions, but as their fortunes begin to dwindle, you can observe that one by one slowly falling prey to many superstitious practices. This is a great insight into people’s psychology of clinging on to a sense of certainty and security as the world around them crumbles.
None of the characters can either be classified as “good” or “bad” in binary terms. Each one has their good side as well as the bad side. Perhaps this is the great strength of the novel as it lays emphasis on the shades of grey when it comes to judging a person’s actions. Often times, you can justify a character’s actions from his or her point of view but cannot be justified from the other’s person’s perspective.
One can spend a lifetime researching this novel. Don’t hesitate to enter the dream world created by the good old Cao Xueqin.