![]() ![]() These centuries-old canonical works may evoke mildew and dust. … a cornerstone text of Chinese fiction, and an index to early modern Chinese culture, thought, and history: its stature in East Asian literature may be compared with that of The Canterbury Tales or Don Quixote in European letters. ![]() Lovell’s introduction to her just-released version provides a succinct plot summary of Monkey King, along with an (unsurprisingly masterful) overview of the work’s place in East Asian and diaspora culture: ![]() They encounter spectacular and fantastic dangers, yet survive and return with their treasure, and attain immortality.” But such a reduction does reveal Monkey King to be another rendition of what Joseph Campbell calls the monomyth, the hero’s journey-Luke Skywalker is but a recent version. I open this review with a hat tip to Star Wars, in part because trying to offer a plot synopsis of Monkey King in a thousand-word essay would be like trying to capture Lucas’s oeuvre within the same confines-the result would be something bloodless and boring like “A band of unlikely, supernatural and flawed heroes join forces for a quest seeking the Holy Grail of their era, sacred Buddhist sutras far away in the West. … it was such a disgrace for a man of literary reputation to produce a novel in the vulgar tongue that the story was published anonymously. And “anonymous” because, as scholar and eventual Ambassador to the United States, Hu Shih, suggests in his introduction to the venerable Arthur Waley translation of 1943: “Assembled” because Monkey King, or Journey to the West (c 1580), is in substantial part a collection of the folk tales of many previous centuries, based on the legendary journeys of a T’ang Dynasty (618-906) monk, Tripitaka. Centuries ago, in an empire far far away, an anonymous journeyman scribe authored and assembled a picaresque that became one of China’s most revered and influential literary works. ![]()
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