Beneath the roof of the world – Isabel Hilton

From the Guardian:

The three-year journey that inspired first Stick Out Your Tongue and then Red Dust was taken 20 years ago, and the book itself was banned in China in 1987. In Lhasa, when he arrived, the Chinese were celebrating the 20th anniversary of the “liberation” of Tibet, a miserable festival of flags and blaring loudspeakers imposed on a sullen, conquered people. Ma Jian escaped to the high plateau to wander among nomads and monks in search of spiritual truth, but discovered instead poverty and the degradation of a spiritual tradition all but destroyed by political persecution. Tibet since has been subject to waves of Han migration. The Tibetan city of Lhasa has largely been destroyed and prostitution flourishes amid the Chinese-imposed concrete blocks and karaoke kitsch. Today Han Chinese visit Tibet as tourists, buying up Buddhist images that they hope will help them in their businesses; for them Tibet has been tamed as a spiritual Disneyland, not unlike the Tibet of many western imaginations.

Is Ma Jian’s depiction of Tibetan life a time capsule, as one critic wrote of his last book, The Noodle Maker – a snapshot of a moment already swept away by the new economic tide? If we read it as documentary, perhaps. But Ma Jian is not writing documentary. He wrote, as he says in his afterword, of Tibet as he had experienced it, both as a reality and a state of mind.

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