The Nine-tailed Turtle explained

T:九尾龜
S:九尾龟
First:t
P:Jiǔ Wěi Guī
W:Chiu Wei Kuei

The Nine-tailed Turtle (also translated as Nine-tailed Turtles, Nine-headed Turtle, or Nine-times Cuckold) is a novel by (?-1935), an author from Piling (near modern-day Changzhou). The novel centres around the life of a scholar named Zhang Qiugu, who leaves his wife to spend time with famous courtesans in China's pleasure districts.

The book was serialized from 1906 to 1910 and has 192 chapters,[1] making it one of the longest novels produced in China's late Qing and early Republican eras. During that time, it was "phenomenally popular",[2] and was one of the most widely read books of the 1920s,[3] as well as one of the most popular novels of its time written partly in Wu Chinese.[4] In the 20th century, many intellectuals criticised it for its erotic content, and during the intervening years it "fell into oblivion",[3] with the result that by the 1980s it was difficult to obtain even a Chinese copy of the novel.[5] However, by the 21st century it had a continued high circulation with new editions and print runs.[3]

Development

Wang Tao, a man who knew Zhang Chunfan, said that the novel was based on the author's real life love affair with a courtesan in Shanghai.[6] Mainly due to commercial reasons, Zhang Chunfan found difficulty in ending the story at an opportune time, so he continued the novel until he exhausted his imagination. David Wang argued that this may also be due to Zhang Chunfan's unwillingness to end the book with a standard good ending with the protagonist settling down to raise a family.[2]

Title

The book's title refers to the consequences of a scandal in the household of Kang Jisheng, a former Jiangxi governor. The novel explains that "turtle" is a derisive word for a husband with an unfaithful wife. In the case of Kang Jisheng, all nine women in his household are loose, so he has the name "nine-tailed Turtle". These consequences were described by David Der-wei Wang as "laughable".[7] The titular turtle and tails do not make up the main storyline.[8]

Plot

The story chronicles Zhang Qiugu, a scholar who travels for courtesans.[1] Several tales of debauchery appear prior to the portion about Kang Jisheng. The titular scandal regarding Kang Jisheng's family appears within chapters 79-80 and 115-127, in the middle of the novel; it is not the main plot of the novel. Some critics of The Nine-tailed Turtle argue that the novel does not have a plot structure and the placement of the scandal is an example of that. David Wang argues that the scandal is "nonetheless the most exemplary, or the most spectacular, of the episodes of the novel that superficially caution against the dangers of debauchery."[8] Zhang Qiugu marries one courtesan but after becoming married he continues to visit other prostitutes. In the second portion of the novel, Judge Investigator Jin hires Zhang Qiugu, who travels to Beijing and Tianjin, becoming involved with the women there. He partially wins the favor of his boss.[2]

The essay "The Nine-Tailed Turtle: Pornography or 'Fiction of Exposure'" by Jean Duval, published in the book The Chinese Novel at the Turn of the Century, categorizes this novel as having a "string-like plot".[9] Milena Doleželová-Velingerová, the editor of the book, describes the plot type as having "a string-like plot" which "consists of four planes: the main protagonist's story—the "string"; the secondary (optional) protagonist's story which parallels it; the sequence of self-contained anecdotes; and non-action material in a belletristic form (the last two being held solely together by the string."[9]

Purpose

David Der-wei Wang wrote that "the pedagogical dimension of the novel is unmistakable".[7] He thought the moral is "one should play the game [of] sexual aberrations...the smart way so as to avoid monetary loss and family scandal", not that one should abstain from it altogether.[8] Hu Shih and Lu Xun criticized it as "a textbook for brothel goers" and a "handbook for brothelgoers" .[7] In general, many critics of the work called it pornography.[10]

Jean Duval argued that, while the novel is pornography,[7] it includes social criticism and expresses the idea that emotions provide escape for people in a corrupted world, an idea he called "sentimentality".[10] He said it served as a precursor to 1910s "Mandarin Ducks and Butterflies" romance fiction.[11] [10]

Robert E. Hegel, in The Chinese Novel at the Turn of the Century, wrote that Duval's essay "demonstrates that [the novel] is more than the "handbook for brothel-goers" it was originally claimed to be".[11] Wang said it "does not merely tempt readers with depraved episodes and sensual female characters" but also includes instructions on how to deal with prostitutes of all levels, "how to squander money the right way, and, most important, how to become a versatile and responsible libertine".[7] He argued a lack of eroticism within The Nine-Tailed Turtle disqualifies it as pornography despite the setting in a "world preoccupied with erotic impulses".[7]

Characters

Reception

According to David Der-wei Wang, The Nine-tailed Turtle was one of the most popular works of fiction during the late Qing Dynasty period.[1] Wang credits this to the "encyclopedic exposé of nasty tricks and sordid deals of the demimonde" and the "catchy title".[1] Up to the 1920s a poll ranked the book as one of the most favorite books of university students.[1] Wang argues that the usage of the Wu dialect in the novel's conversational scenes, "indicating [Zhang's] regional consciousness and linguistic alertness", was the novel's sole redeeming factor for "enlightened readers in the May Fourth era".[7]

From the May Fourth era onwards, many scholars have criticized The Nine-tailed Turtle, accusing it of being a depraved novel. Hu Shih and Lu Xun accused it of being, as paraphrased by Wang, "a showcase of the bad taste and frivolity of late Qing literati writers".[7] Hu Shih and Lu Xun said that the book became a bestseller due to the poor tastes of readers.[2] According to Wang, by calling it a handbook or textbook for brothel-goers, Hu Shih and Lu Xun "ensured its lasting notoriety"[7] and Wang also noted that in 1997 the work still had "an image problem".[7]

David Wang argued that because the author had not ended the book at an appropriate time, the second half of The Nine-tailed Turtle is "a dreadfully boring work."[2]

See also

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. [David Der-wei Wang|Wang, David Der-wei]
  2. Wang, David Der-wei, p. 87.
  3. Starr, p. xxi.
  4. Snow, p. 261.
  5. Doar, p. 201.
  6. Yeh, p. 381. ("Notes to Pages 265-299") - "With regard to Han Qiuhe, the hero of The Nine-Tailed Turtle, Wang Tao, who knew the author Zhang Chunfan, stated that the novel was based on the author's love affair with a Shanghai courtesan. With regard to Zhang Qiugu, in The Shadows of Heaven and Earth" - Note: The book author mistakenly swapped the names of Zhang Qiugu and Han Qiuhe.
  7. Wang, David Der-wei, p. 82.
  8. Wang, David Der-wei, p. 83.
  9. [Wilt Idema|Idema]
  10. Yee, p. 574.
  11. Hegel, p. 91.
  12. Yeh, p. 269.
  13. Duval, p. 184.
  14. Wang, David Der-wei, p. 85.
  15. Wang, David Der-wei, p. 88.
  16. Wang, David Der-wei, p. 82-83.
  17. Wang, David Der-wei, p. 85-86.
  18. Wang, David Der-wei, p. 86.
  19. Wang, David Der-wei, p. 112.
  20. McMahon, p. 131.
  21. [David Der-wei Wang|Wang, David Der-wei]