Modern Australian
Men's Weekly

.

Why you should read China's vast, 18th century novel, Dream of the Red Chamber

  • Written by Josh Stenberg, Lectuter in Chinese Studies, University of Sydney

In our series, Guide to the classics, experts explain key works of literature.

When asked to explain the significance and pleasure of the Chinese novel Dream of the Red Chamber, by Cao Xueqin, I’m afraid I usually flounder. How to put it to friends, students or colleagues that the tiffs, the leisurely intrigues and frustrated aspirations of a fractious bunch of adolescents constitute one of the great efforts at plumbing human experience?

Yet Dream of the Red Chamber, written in the mid-18th century, is the fullest immersion one could hope for into late imperial China, the best access to the minds, hearts and habits of that period, complete in everything from cosmology to cosmetics.

Read more: Far from white-washing, ABC's Monkey Magic remake takes us back to its cross-cultural roots

The episodic plot, sprawling over 2,500 pages in the standard Penguin translation, follows the infatuations and travails of a pubescent boy, Jia Baoyu. Baoyu is the unstudious and distracted son of a great, albeit troubled, house in Beijing. He is surrounded by a bevy of erudite and beautiful girls (relatives and maidservants), doted upon by his elderly grandmother, and terrified by his strict, pedantic father — a paragon or parody of the Confucian gentleman. In the pavilions, halls and gardens of this grand estate, allegory of and escape from the world, Baoyu struggles reluctantly towards adulthood.

Why you should read China's vast, 18th century novel, Dream of the Red Chamber A painting from a series of brush paintings by Qing Dynasty artist Sun Wen, depicting scenes from the novel Dream of the Red Chamber. Wikimedia

The interlocking pieces of the plot are revealing vignettes and character studies, many of which have reached iconic status in Chinese culture, and proved fertile ground for theatre and the visual arts.

They function also as a mirror of a reader’s personality, status, age and values. Do you tend towards the maiden who moderates with steady counsel or to the volatile but brilliant orphan girl? Do you deplore or delight in the fiery, funny administrating aunt’s shady outlay of expenses and sometimes malicious (or even murderous) feistiness? As with Proust, the perspective changes with age: re-reading the novel this year, I noticed how my sympathies were shifting upward a generation.

What’s it all about?

The deceptively immaterial occupations of the characters’ daily rounds of visits and chats provide material as much for metaphysics as for psychology. Drama can be constructed one moment around whether Baoyu will have his tea (his nanny sometimes appropriates it), and the next moment around the boundaries of reality, or the purpose of human striving.

Somehow, almost deviously, through the spats, crushes and rivalries of a handful of teenagers, the great questions of the human condition are broached: what is a good life, faced with the inevitability and omnipresence of death? What are one’s obligations? How real is this life and what is it for?

Take the famous little scene in Chapter 22 when Baoyu is inspired to throw fallen flower petals into the stream, but is chided by his sensitive cousin, Daiyu, who remarks:

It isn’t a good idea to tip them into the water … The water you see here is clean, but farther on beyond the weir, where it flows on beyond people’s houses, there are all sorts of muck and impurity, and in the end they get spoiled just the same. In that corner over there I’ve got a grave for the flowers, and what I am doing now is sweeping them up and putting them in this silk bag to bury them there, so that they can gradually turn back into earth.

Contained in this image is, depending on how you see it, a poignant image of grief, an allegory of love or its inadequacy, or a Buddhist exhortation to accept impermanence. The work’s ability to imbue petty incident and trifling games with philosophical resonance is peerless.

Read more: Book review – Clive Hamilton's Silent Invasion: China's Influence in Australia

Why you should read China's vast, 18th century novel, Dream of the Red Chamber The actor Mei Lanfang in a 1924 adaptation of Dream of the Red Chamber. 梅兰芳先生《黛玉葬花》剧照集锦

But while you are distracted by the intricate web of their relations, and, we hope, by Baoyu’s marriage and/or enlightenment, the reader realises that this is a family, an estate, a dynasty, a universe, in decay.

Cao Xueqin, the author, was himself the scion of a family in slow collapse, and the work (left unfinished and completed after his death) is often read as an elegy to his own vanished childhood. From our historical vantage point, it is hard not also to recall that within 50 years of the novel’s publication, China was in the throes of the Opium War, its sense of self-sufficiency and centrality forever fractured (until, perhaps, now).

Scholars of the novel, whose field of study has expanded so far that it is known as “Redology”, have used the text to look into everything from the era’s medical practices, the prevalent tastes in theatre, its queer desire, ethnic power relations and reading habits.

An antidote to facile stereotyping

Dream of the Red Chamber has Balzac’s panoramic view of society, the satire of arrogance and fashion of Vanity Fair, the funny, meandering mischief of Decameron. But these comparisons are inadequate to a work so monumental and so vehemently itself, the epitome of the great tradition of Chinese family fiction.

The novel has spawned innumerable adaptations for the stage and screen, as well as dozens of sequels attempting to rescue or resolve its characters’ dilemmas and narrative arcs. It has influenced everything from the witty, cruel short stories of Eileen Chang, to the claustrophobic film, Raise the Red Lantern, and the opulent concubine-poisoners’ dramas of popular TV serials such as Empresses in the Palace.

The 1987 Chinese TV adaptation of the novel.

Above all, reading (or prescribing) the novel feels like the antidote to facile stereotyping of Chinese culture. All the core topics are present: family dynamics; Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism; face and status; strategy and emotion. But all of these are played out for a readership which still regarded the world outside China as a curiosity, and was under no pressure to defend or justify its culture. It is a work of the Qing Dynasty, by a Qing author, for Qing readers; and it is the modern reader’s good fortune just to be allowed in.

Whether you read it straight through or dip in from time to time, this work affords entry to one of the great fictional universes.

Authors: Josh Stenberg, Lectuter in Chinese Studies, University of Sydney

Read more http://theconversation.com/why-you-should-read-chinas-vast-18th-century-novel-dream-of-the-red-chamber-94824

Expert Plumbing Solutions in Perth: From Hot Water Systems to Leak Detection

Plumbing is one of those things we often take for granted—until something goes wrong. From stepping into an unexpectedly cold shower to discovering ...

Eco-smart Car Removal in Sydney: Practical Steps That Cut Waste and Return Value

Sydney’s ageing cars add up to a serious waste stream, and choosing the right removal service makes a measurable difference. Your decision sends m...

Measuring the Success of Your Bus Advertising Campaign

Bus ads turn everyday travel into high-reach media. They move through busy corridors, sit in traffic where people can read them, and keep working af...

Partner Visa Pathways: Onshore vs Offshore Applications Explained

Choosing between Australia’s onshore and offshore partner visa routes affects timing, travel, work rights and budget. This guide explains the stru...

Serving Styles Compared: Buffet, Grazing, or Plated for the Office

Choosing how to serve food at a work function shapes the pace of the event, how people mingle and how smoothly the agenda runs. The right format dep...

5 Essential Tips for Hiring Gold Coast Plumbers

Finding the best plumber on the Gold Coast can be as complex as navigating a network of pipes, requiring an expert who is capable, reliable, and s...

Hidden Costs of Moving You Need to Budget For (And How to Avoid Them)

Moving house ranks among life's most busy experiences, and discovering unexpected expenses along the way certainly doesn't help with stress levels. Wh...

Understanding Australian Building Regulations: What Every Mornington Builder Wants You to Know

If you live on the Mornington Peninsula, you likely already feel the risk of bushfires,hot, dry summers, nearby bushland, and epic wind events. That...

Top 5 Home Exercises Recommended by Chiropractors for Better Posture

In today’s world of endless screen time and back-to-back Zoom meetings, it’s no surprise that posture-related issues are on the rise. From achin...

Simple Home Exercises to Manage Chronic Pain and Improve Mobility

Living with chronic pain doesn’t have to mean a life of limitation. Many people struggling with persistent discomfort find themselves moving less...

Smart Renovation Tips for a Sleek, Low-Maintenance Interior

In a world where time is tight and stress is high, our homes should feel like a refuge not another to-do list. That’s why smart renovations are tr...

Stay Cool in Queensland: The Complete Guide to Choosing the Right Air Conditioner

Introduction Queensland’s warm, humid climate makes a reliable air conditioning system an essential part of daily life. Whether you’re creating a...

Proving Partner Visas with Lawyers and Solid Evidence

You’re ready to build a life with your partner in Australia but the visa process quickly turns something personal into something official. Suddenl...

The History and Philosophy Behind Osteopathic Medicine

Osteopathy is more than just a hands-on approach to relieving pain—it’s a holistic health philosophy with roots in history, science, and a deep ...

Common Bathroom Renovation Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Renovating a bathroom can be one of the most rewarding home improvement projects, offering both enhanced functionality and a fresh aesthetic. Howeve...

5 Simple Home Modifications to Support Occupational Therapy Goals

Every year, thousands of Australians face mobility challenges, chronic pain, or sensory issues that make daily tasks difficult. Simple changes at ho...

The Cost of Converting a Shipping Container into a Liveable Space

Container conversions often require more planning and labour than expected Early costs include foundations, framing, and structural reinforceme...

Marriage Celebrant for Modern Lovers Who Want Something Different

Many couples today feel pressure to follow the same wedding traditions their parents or grandparents did. They might sit through long ceremonies that ...