Imagen del autor

Pat Barr (1934–2018)

Autor de Jade: A Novel of China

21+ Obras 348 Miembros 5 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye los nombres: Pat Barr, Patt Barr, Patricia Miriam BARR

Nota de desambiguación:

(eng) VIAF ID: 8628779

Series

Obras de Pat Barr

Obras relacionadas

The Yangtze Valley and Beyond (1899) — Introducción, algunas ediciones118 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Barr, Pat
Nombre legal
Barr, Patricia Miriam
Otros nombres
Copping, Patricia Miriam
Fecha de nacimiento
1934-04-25
Fecha de fallecimiento
2018
Género
female
Nacionalidad
Engeland
Lugar de nacimiento
Norwich, Norfolk, Engeland
Lugares de residencia
Yokohama, Japan
Londen, Engeland
Educación
Universiteit van Birmingham (BA ∙ 1956)
Universiteit College Londen (MA ∙ 1964)
Ocupaciones
Lerares
Auteur
Organizaciones
Yokohama Internationale School
Universiteit van Maryland (Overzees Programma in Japan)
National Old People's Welfare Council
Biografía breve
Pat Barr was born in Norwich, Norfolk and read English at Birmingham University and University College, London.
Her first non-fiction books, The Coming of the Barbarians and The Deer Cry Pavilion, are about western settlements in Japan, where she once lived for three years. Her other non-fiction books include A Curious Life for a Lady, To China with Love, The Memsahibs and Taming the Jungle, all set in the nineteenth century East. She then turned her hand to fiction with Jade. Pat Barr makes frequent trips to the East, dividing the rest of her time between Blackheath, London and the Hebridean Isle of Coll. ( Information found in her book Kenjiro published by Corgi books 1986)
Aviso de desambiguación
VIAF ID: 8628779

Miembros

Reseñas

There's a lot about this book that is excellent, but by page 400 out of 597, I was tired of it. Partly it is because I neither like nor dislike Alice, although I admire her capabilities, but that's along time to spend with her. Not even the Siege of the International Legations stirred much interest.

The best part is the apparent erudition of the author, who seems to know her Chinese history and culture very well. I'm somewhat familiar with the period, so I didn't learn a great deal, but it was very well presented.

Alice Greenwood is about 12 at the time on the Tientsin (Tianjin) Church Massacre, which began as a protest against Catholic nuns who were rumored to be kidnapping children and baptizing them as Christians. It spilled over onto Christian missions in general, including the Greenwood's. Alice and her younger brother Frank are dragged off to Hunan to serve as hostages, a trip of about 600 miles or almost 1,500 km in a cart with minimal food, and then confined by the Chu family in a kitchen courtyard storage room, again with little food or protection against the weather. After it becomes clear that they cannot be traded for the life of a Chu relative, Eldest son is eager to kill them, but his father instead has them absorbed into the household as slaves. Two of the younger Chu children befriend the Greenwoods. Alice becomes Mei's personal servant, studies with her, and then, in addition, an unofficial and very willing concubine to her father. Frank is placed in the stable, where he becomes a groom and friend to Han-li. The Greenwoods seem to have forgiven, and almost forgotten, their past miseries.

In some ways this is believable. I'm certain that most readers have heard of the Stockholm Syndrome, Barr comments that the little niche in Mei's quarters pleases her more than any other room that she will see in her life. After the horrors of living in the storage shed, she is now warm, dry, and well-fed. One can see how she could be overwhelmed with gratitude to Mei. Mei's father is apparently a skilled lover, and in a graphic scene where they are trying out various sex positions, shows phenomenal stamina, and Alice longs to be summoned to bed by him. When he leaves the household in the charge of his older son, who wanted to kill the children, Alice is thrown out, and with another slave, makes her way east and finds her family - not an entirely happy reunion. A few years later, she and Frank are reminiscing about what a beloved home they had at the Chus'. I felt a bit ill.

This view of the Chus spends relies too much on particulars to make a general point, which I'm pretty sure that Barr meant to do. Suppose that the Greenwoods hadn't been befriended by the younger Chus. Suppose that the older Chu had found Alice as unattractive as the others thought he should. Then the Greenwoods would have remained low status even among the servants, and might have ended up fleeing when Elder Son was running the household and threw them out.

As the reader, I was not influenced by being a captive or a slave of love, and I was often at odds with how Alice, and presumably the author wanted me to view the Chus. At one point, it occurs to Alice that the house is a prison for the Chu women, who have bound feet and seldom leave the family home. Yet she later nostagically imagines them sitting in their beautiful garden embroidering. I suppose that this is supposed to be offset by her lackluster interest in ending foot-binding. In the end, the Chus represent a glorious civilization unwilling or unable to recognize the need for reforms to deal with the new world that is thrust upon them.

If the Chus wanted to use the children as hostages, I would have thought that they would have treated them better in the beginning - hostages that have died from malnutrition and exposure aren't of much use. I also began to marvel at how much Alice learned in the 3 to 4 years of her schooling. She speaks and is literate in both the Hunanese and Mandarin dialects, and has committed an enormous amount of poetry to memory.

Alice enters into what becomes an unhappy marriage, runs a business on her own, takes a Chinese lover, and becomes involved in Chines reform politics. She suffers through the slaughter at Port Arthur during the Sino-Japanese war of 1894-1895 (her presence was a bit contrived) and the Siege of the International Legations. She spends most of her adulthood among the Europeans in China, and seems to find them quite inferior. She attends a party and leaves early after being disgusted with the body mass, clothing, and disgusting European dancing. She scorns them as nobodies who wouldn't be able to live as luxuriously at home as they do in the international community in China --unlike the Chus who presumably deserve to live in luxury. Barr admits to a few flaws in traditional Chinese culture, especially for upper class women, but on the whole, I don't think that she quite achieves the balance that she is trying for. I began to wonder why Alice didn't make a greater effort to set herself up as "Chinese Alice" indeed, a colorful grand eccentric, and live more independently of the Europeans.

Yes, the Europeans were invaders, just as the Chinese were when they conquered the Uighurs of Sinkiang. Everyone wants to assert that the natural, god-ordained borders of their country are those they occupied at the height of their power and empire-building, and want to start history at a point when they look particularly sympathetic. Someone I know loved to tell me about how my ancestors (using the word in a very broad sense) persecuted her ancestors. After a couple of decades of this, I pointed out what she already knew -- unfortunately, it is true that my ancestors persecuted hers. It is equally true that her ancestors persecuted mine, and the pair of them persecuted other people. There are very few clean hands. It is not that two wrongs make a right, but rather of not clumsily trying to set up villians and heroes.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
PuddinTame | May 20, 2022 |
I loved this book about Isabella Bird, eminent Victorian-era traveler. I appreciate the work that historian Pat Barr put into compiling all of Isabella Bird's available letters and books, along with historical details about the places she visited. It was very engaging, and sometimes laugh out loud funny, from beginning to end. My copy (1970 hardcover First Edition) has many photographs, some taken by Isabella, and also drawings she did. Includes sources and and index.
 
Denunciada
SaintSunniva | otra reseña | Mar 3, 2019 |
I decided to give up on this--I didn't care enough and there was an overabundance of flowery language, which I dislike. I took it to my local Little Free Library--I hope it finds the right person!
1 vota
Denunciada
emilyesears | otra reseña | Aug 29, 2016 |
the whole idea was interesting but too many people, so can't really remember any individuals.
 
Denunciada
mahallett | May 31, 2016 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
21
También por
1
Miembros
348
Popularidad
#68,679
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
58
Idiomas
4

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