Bei Cun
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Bei Cun (), pen name of Kang Hong ( (
Changting County (; Hakka: Tshòng-tin), also known as Tingzhou or Tingchow (), is a county in western Fujian province, People's Republic of China. With a population of 480,000 and an area of , Changting is the fifth largest county in the provinc The majority of ...
,
Fujian Fujian (; alternately romanized as Fukien or Hokkien) is a province on the southeastern coast of China. Fujian is bordered by Zhejiang to the north, Jiangxi to the west, Guangdong to the south, and the Taiwan Strait to the east. Its capi ...
, September 16, 1965) is a Chinese avant-garde Christian novelist. He has been described as "the only openly Christian Chinese writer who enthusiastically incorporates religious themes into his fiction."


Early years

Kang Hong experienced the
Cultural Revolution The Cultural Revolution, formally known as the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, was a sociopolitical movement in the People's Republic of China (PRC) launched by Mao Zedong in 1966, and lasting until his death in 1976. Its stated goal ...
as a child first exposed to human evil, a theme that will return in his novels. He studied at
Xiamen University Xiamen University (; Southern Min: ''Ē-mn̂g-toā-o̍h''), colloquially known as Xia Da (; Southern Min: ''Hā-tāi''), is a national public research university in Xiamen, Fujian, China. Founded in 1921 by Tan Kah Kee, a Chinese patriotic exp ...
from 1981 to 1985. He was a brilliant student and after graduation was hired as editor of the journal ''Fujian Literarure'', where he started publishing under the pen name of Bei Cun. He was immediately noticed as a writer critical of authority when he published, in the first issue of ''Fujian Literarure'' he edited in 1986, the short story ''Black Horses'' (). When a storm hits, all horses in a group follow their leader, the Old Black Horse, not realizing that it is as clueless as they are about how to save the herd. In the end, it brings them to the edge of a cliff.


Avant-garde author

Most Chinese critics divide Bei Cun's writing career in two separate stages, as an avant-garde author before the conversion to Christianity in 1992, and as a Christian novelist after that date. Leung Laifong wrote that the writer's "career falls into two parts, with 1992 as the demarcation line." This interpretation, however, was contested in 2018 by Chinese scholars Zhang Yunyan and Wang Huiping. They analyzed Bei Cun's pre-1992 writings and argued that, perhaps unbeknownst to the author himself, religious themes and questions were always implicitly present there. Bei Cun was part of the generation of writers who, after the Cultural Revolution, experimented with new languages, including fastidious descriptions of objects and landscapes, and deliberate repetitions. Some critics even considered him "the only ealavant-garde writer" of the 1980s. Most of his early novels are
detective stories A detective is an investigator, usually a member of a law enforcement agency. They often collect information to solve crimes by talking to witnesses and informants, collecting physical evidence, or searching records in databases. This leads th ...
starting with a homicide, but the plot and the denouement are not conventional. Discovering who the murderer was is less important than exploring the feelings of the characters and introducing powerful metaphors. In what was hailed as Bei Cun's best pre-1992 novel, ''Guozao zhe shuo'' () ("Uproar" or "The Noisy"), published in 1991, a deaf-mute principal of a school regains the ability to speak when the words "God said, let there be light and there was light" are written by a noisy, pompous professor, who also writes, "I said, let there be God and there was God." The principal then dies in a fire started by an arsonist and the professor commits suicide. The real theme of the novel, it has been argued, is not murder, but the ambiguity and power of the language.


Christian writer

In March 1992, Bei Cun experienced what he described as an instant conversion to
Protestant Protestantism is a Christian denomination, branch of Christianity that follows the theological tenets of the Reformation, Protestant Reformation, a movement that began seeking to reform the Catholic Church from within in the 16th century agai ...
Christianity through a mystical experience. After the conversion, he joined a
house church A house church or home church is a label used to describe a group of Christians who regularly gather for worship in private homes. The group may be part of a larger Christian body, such as a parish, but some have been independent groups that see ...
in
Beijing } Beijing ( ; ; ), alternatively romanized as Peking ( ), is the capital of the People's Republic of China. It is the center of power and development of the country. Beijing is the world's most populous national capital city, with over 21 ...
and did not publish anything for one year, although he was busy writing ''The Baptismal River'' (), which was published in 1993. The novel depicts organized crime in Republican China through the ruthless fight between the bosses of two criminal families in Fujian, Liu Lang and Ma Da. Liu, whose career the novel follows, consolidates the power he inherited from his father by eliminating all his rivals, including members of his own family. Old and immensely rich, he realizes his life has no real meaning, converts to Protestantism, and is even willing to help his arch-enemy Ma. Critics noticed the book as a rare example of a Chinese novel focused on evil and conversion, which is described here in Christian terms very much different from the "re-education" offered by the Chinese jail system. Bei Cun's subsequent novels puzzled some Christian readers because, unlike ''The Baptismal River'', the religious theme was not at the center of the plot. ''The Lament of Loss'' (, 1993), ''The Love Story of Mazhuo'' (, 1994), and the novella ''Zhou Yu's Train'' () are all about women who struggle to find the perfect love only to conclude it does not exist. In all three stories, one or more of the main characters either die tragically or commit suicide. If there is a Christian theme here, it is that women fail by pursuing a possessive romantic love, while only spiritual love would have saved them. The novella was made into a 2002 movie with the same title, ''
Zhou Yu's Train ''Zhou Yu's Train'' () is a 2002 Chinese film, based on a novella by Bei Cun, directed by Sun Zhou, and starring Gong Li and Tony Leung Ka-Fai. The title refers to a poetic compilation published by the character in the movie played by Leung. ...
'', directed by Sun Zhou and starring
Gong Li Gong Li (Chinese: 巩俐; born 31 December 1965) is a Chinese actress. She starred in three of the four Chinese-language films that were nominated for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film. Gong was born in Shenyang, Liaoni ...
and
Tony Leung Ka-Fai Tony Leung Ka-fai (; born 1 February 1958) is a Hong Kong actor who is a four-time winner of the Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor. As he is often confused with actor Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Tony Leung Ka-fai is known as "Big Tony," while Tony Leu ...
. It tells the story of a widow, Zhou Yu, who lives in the loving memory of her husband, killed accidentally by electric shock in the rain. In the end, she discovers that her "perfect" husband in fact had a lover, who tells her that Zhou Yu's possessiveness and jealousy were responsible for his infidelity. With the 2004 novel ''Fennu'' (, "Anger"), Bei Cun returned both to his early theme of murder and to the Christian theme of conversion. Li Bailing is a rich businessman known as a philanthropist but hides two dark secrets, an incestuous relation with his adopted daughter and the murder of the policeman who tortured his father to death. At the end of the novel, Li repents and confesses to God that his life has been dominated by anger rather than love. The themes of crime and repentance are also at the center of Bei Cun's later Christian novels, ''I Have an Agreement with God'' (, 2006) and ''A Consolation Letter'' (, 2016). In these stories, Bei Cun's "faith-writing" situates his characters in a larger social context, and hope prevails upon fear even in tragic circumstances.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Cun, Bei 1965 births Living people People's Republic of China novelists Chinese male novelists Writers from Fujian