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Shanghai baby (1993)

di Wei Hui

Altri autori: Vedi la sezione altri autori.

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
8491925,551 (2.99)13
The gap that divides those of us born in the 1970s and the older generation has never been so wide. Dark and edgy, deliciously naughty, an intoxicating cocktail of sex and the search for love, Shanghai Baby has already risen to cult status in mainland China. The risque contents of the breakthrough novel by hip new author Wei Hui have so alarmed Beijing authorities that thousands of copies have been confiscated and burned. As explicit as Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer, as shocking as Trainspotting, this story of a beautiful writer and her erotically charged affairs jumps, howls, and hits the ground running as it depicts the new generation rising in the East. Set in the centuries-old port city of Shanghai, the novel follows the days, and nights, of the irrepressibly carnal Coco, who waits tables in a café when she meets her first lover, a sensitive Chinese artist. Defying her parents, Coco moves in with her boyfriend and enters a frenzied, orgasmic world of drugs and hedonism. But, helpless to stop her gentle lover's descent into addiction, Coco becomes attracted to a boisterous Westerner, a rich German businessman with a penchant for S/M and seduction. Now, with an entourage of friends ranging from a streetwise madame to a rebellious filmmaker, Coco's forays into in the territory of love and lust cross the borders between two cultures -- awakening her guilt and fears of discovery, yet stimulating her emerging sexual self. Searing a blistering image into the reader's imagination, Shanghai Baby provides an alternative travelogue into the back streets of a city and the hard-core escapades of today's liberated youth. Wei Hui's provocative portrayal of men, women, and cultural transition is an astonishing and brave exposure of the unacknowledged new China, breaking through official rhetoric to show the inroads of the West and a people determined to burst free.… (altro)
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» Vedi le 13 citazioni

Inglese (15)  Spagnolo (2)  Catalano (1)  Tedesco (1)  Tutte le lingue (19)
1-5 di 19 (prossimo | mostra tutto)
Quería creer que el cuerpo y el corazón de una mujer se pueden separar. Si los hombres podían lograrlo, ¿por qué las mujeres no?» Esta es la historia de Cocó, una joven china aspirante a escritora, atrapada en un triángulo amoroso. Vive con su novio, Tiantian, un joven de una sensibilidad extraordinaria que tiene un grave problema de impotencia y que, a pesar de amar intensamente a Cocó, no puede satisfacerla sexualmente. En una fiesta, Cocó conoce a Mark, un alemán casado, con quien iniciará una aventura centrada en la mutua atracción sexual pero que, inevitablemente, se irá desplazando hacia el centro mismo de su ser. En medio del caos emocional, la voz de Cocó nos muestra cómo el amor y el deseo tienen a menudo caminos separados y transmite una inesperada y conmovedora sensación de verdad. Shanghai Baby es también el retrato de la fascinante ciudad de Shanghai en la actualidad. Después de varios libros de éxito que nos han transportado al Oriente de las geishas y sus tradiciones, esta novela nos habla de la vida en la China de hoy. Lírica, inocente, narcisista, apasionada, leal, hedonista, sensible, auténtica, vital, compleja, sincera, sensual, irreverente, frívola y profunda a la vez, Shanghai Baby se ha convertido en un auténtico fenómeno sociocultural y en la referencia de toda una generación de jóvenes chinos, en una novela de culto que afronta con excepcional naturalidad los temas que todavía son tremendos tabús en ese difícil país. Su espectacular acogida de crítica y lectores en Francia, Inglaterra, Italia, Alemana y Japón demuestra una vez más que no hay fronteras para una novela valiente, sincera y rabiosamente contemporánea.
  ArchivoPietro | Oct 25, 2020 |
I would say 2.5 but meh, I don't care. The book and storyline was intriguing at first but then it got more and more dull. I guess what I hated the most is the fact that Coco kept going back to Mark, even though she claimed she loved Tian Tian so much. She's indeed a foolish character in my opinion in all confused about her own self. I guess that's what made me rating pretty low, I really didn't like the main character so much as to the fact that she would betray her lover like that. Hm, I just think it's a pet peeve of mine and to read about it is a turn off. In all, it was alright I guess. I had quite high expectations for this book but they weren't met. ( )
  nerobucciarati | Jul 27, 2020 |
Utter garbage, waste of time.

Don‘t bother. ( )
  Torijama | Sep 5, 2019 |
Shanghai Baby (上海寳貝) by Zhou Weihui is the quintessential novel of the modern, middle-class Chinese woman living in the heady days of the early 90s as China underwent massive socio-economic changes.

Semi-autobiographical in nature and with the link between fact and fiction blurred for marketing purposes, Shanghai Baby is replete with brand names, sexualised themes and empty dialogue. Commercialisation and materialism are glamorised to an obscene extent, with the protagonist at every opportunity announcing to all the brand name make-up, cars, drinks, music, places etc. she uses and visits. This vapid materialism is compounded by the sexual element of Coco's story - at every opportunity she discusses the superiority of western penises and bemoans the fact her Chinese lover is impotent.

All of this comes together in a heavily commercialised novel that reeks of self-promotion and exhibitionism; sex and material wealth are constantly exploited for commercial profit. Shanghai Baby is merely the culmination of the trend of "Babe Writers", common in the early 90s, whose novels focused on the lives of modern independent women in modern China. However, whatever sociological or literary worth this phenomenon might have had is lost in vapid, empty dialogue, obnoxious and one-dimensional characters, and exploitative writings. Unlike earlier novels by Chinese women, Shanghai Baby has nothing to do with protest, personal growth, or rebellion against social convention; rather it is testimony to the mantra "sex sells".

The only thing modern about this novel is its alternative Shanghai setting populated by artists, writers, and disaffected Generation Y members but ultimately that as well is nothing more than stereotypical hedonism and materialism. ( )
  xuebi | May 30, 2014 |
She writes like a disembodied spirit – atmospheric, intimate, sometimes hollow. In this novel, we follow Coco around Shanghai, and into and out of the arms of her two lovers. She maintains a firefly lightness of language and even manages a little tangle of a plot. She does remind me a lot of Anais Nin, darting from observation to sensation, always just slightly surprised. ( )
  astrologerjenny | Apr 24, 2013 |
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» Aggiungi altri autori (11 potenziali)

Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Wei Huiautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Humes, BruceTraduttoreautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato

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For my parents, my love,
and Fudan University
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My name is Nikki but my friends all call me Coco after Coco Chanel, a French lady who lived to be almost ninety.
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Wikipedia in inglese (1)

The gap that divides those of us born in the 1970s and the older generation has never been so wide. Dark and edgy, deliciously naughty, an intoxicating cocktail of sex and the search for love, Shanghai Baby has already risen to cult status in mainland China. The risque contents of the breakthrough novel by hip new author Wei Hui have so alarmed Beijing authorities that thousands of copies have been confiscated and burned. As explicit as Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer, as shocking as Trainspotting, this story of a beautiful writer and her erotically charged affairs jumps, howls, and hits the ground running as it depicts the new generation rising in the East. Set in the centuries-old port city of Shanghai, the novel follows the days, and nights, of the irrepressibly carnal Coco, who waits tables in a café when she meets her first lover, a sensitive Chinese artist. Defying her parents, Coco moves in with her boyfriend and enters a frenzied, orgasmic world of drugs and hedonism. But, helpless to stop her gentle lover's descent into addiction, Coco becomes attracted to a boisterous Westerner, a rich German businessman with a penchant for S/M and seduction. Now, with an entourage of friends ranging from a streetwise madame to a rebellious filmmaker, Coco's forays into in the territory of love and lust cross the borders between two cultures -- awakening her guilt and fears of discovery, yet stimulating her emerging sexual self. Searing a blistering image into the reader's imagination, Shanghai Baby provides an alternative travelogue into the back streets of a city and the hard-core escapades of today's liberated youth. Wei Hui's provocative portrayal of men, women, and cultural transition is an astonishing and brave exposure of the unacknowledged new China, breaking through official rhetoric to show the inroads of the West and a people determined to burst free.

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