THE NORMAL AND THE EXCEPTIONAL: A COMPARISON OF PU SONGLING’S AND MO YAN’S SURREAL WORLDS
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
From a comparison of the surreal worlds of Pu Songling and Mo Yan in their
respective auctorial context, this paper argues that although Pu Songling’s short stories
integrate surreal elements, contrary to the accepted typology of genres, they fall into
realistic and not speculative fiction because the worldview of Imperial China in which
he lived not only accepted the supernatural as real, but as foundational to the traditional
order. By comparison, Mo Yan’s supernatural stories partly fall within supernatural
literature, because post-1949 China espoused a scientific worldview which banishes
the supernatural. On a second level, however, both Pu Songling’s and Mo Yan’s surreal
fictions are political satires of their times. Yet, even on this point they diverge. While Pu
Songling articulates the social and political criticism of his present to surreal elements,
Mo Yan casts the surreal as a stand-in for the exceptional situations of his recent past
which are the object of his criticisms.