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The Good Women of China:
Hidden Voices
Xinran In 1988, Xinran was selected to work in state media and ended up at
the Nanjing radio station, where she began broadcasting "Words on the Night
Breeze" a year later. The show featured letters and calls from ordinary
women discussing their problems, and was hugely successful and revelatory,
as women had few avenues, public or private, for talking about their lives,
which were frequently grim and often harrowing. Xinran quit the show in 1995
to try to help her listeners directly, but by 1997 she had burned out. She
persuaded the radio station authorities to let her travel to England, where
she began teaching Chinese, met and married English book agent Toby Eady and
wrote this memoir of her experiences on the program, including a compendium
of some of the most painful of the "Night Breeze" stories. She presents
narratives from women who live "in emotionless political marriages" and
those, the majority, who struggle "amid poverty and hardship." They have
commonly experienced sexual abuse: rape, frequently gang rape. Apparently
designed to bring the women's horrific stories to light, the book doesn't do
enough to situate them clearly in the context of the show as a
state-produced product, or within Xinran's own difficulties in processing
and presenting the material on the air (or in this book). The results will
leave readers sympathetic to the grave enormity of the women's
circumstances, but-due perhaps to minor translation problems and Xinran's
lingering political worries-somewhat confused about how Xinran tried to deal
with their plights. |