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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. The left-wing writings of Mao Dun's "Spring Silkworms," Lao She's "A Hired Wife," Ye Zi's "Harvest," Ba Jin's "A Moonlit Night" and Shen Congwen's "The Husband" all reflect different approaches to the same conclusion: defining the rural problems in China throughout the 1920s and 1930s. Clearly, the problems were both grand and far-reaching, with solutions so extreme that it was not only politically incorrect for the authors to suggest any, but that was the very reason they did so within the safety of their literary worlds. Correspondingly, one cannot easily ignore the blatant bias projected from the sometimes angered authors, whose primary objectives are to present a politically, socially and economically volatile concern to the very foreground of public consciousness, even if these selective biases serve to sometimes limit the use of said documents as primary sources. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCLftWg.rtf
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different approaches to the same conclusion: defining the rural problems in China throughout the 1920s and 1930s. Clearly, the problems were both grand and far-reaching, with solutions so extreme
that it was not only politically incorrect for the authors to suggest any, but that was the very reason they did so within the safety of their literary worlds.
Correspondingly, one cannot easily ignore the blatant bias projected from the sometimes angered authors, whose primary objectives are to present a politically, socially and economically volatile concern to the very
foreground of public consciousness, even if these selective biases serves to sometimes limit the use of said documents as primary sources. A common theme among these stories is the quest
to break free from the oppressive chains of feudalism and develop the tenets of democracy. Feudalism originated as a means by which a small population could maintain tight control
over Chinas political system. Having been compared with the Celts chiefdom political system, feudalism afforded powerful families the ability to hold the political reins over entire societies, just as
long as these particular families upheld their political loyalties and alliances. This clich? type of political rule was quite popular between and among the applicable families; however, it was
not as welcomed by the rest of the citizenry as clearly evidenced by these five stories. It was feudalisms primary goal to confine political and economic power to the
relatively few upper class autocrats, whose authority vastly extended from the power inherent to the dominating all political, social and economic strategies. The pyramidal hierarchy that was inevitably created
as a result of such exclusion ultimately set forth a deficit of basic necessities for those rural inhabitants not deemed worthy of a decent existence. "None of the women
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