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Summary Of Miss Wuo's Suicide

Decent Essays

After the news of what transpired at the Versailles Conference reached China on May 4th of 1919, young Chinese intellectuals sought internal change through means other than adopting western Republican ideals wholesale. Mao Zedong, then a 26 year old teacher at a school in Changsha, had strong opinions about the contemporary state of Chinese politics and culture, some of which he voiced in a series of articles published in Changsha daily in November of 1919. In these articles, he wrote about the story of a woman identified as Miss Zhao, who committed suicide as a result of being forced into an undesired marriage by her family. Mao used the tragedy of Miss Zhao’s suicide as a case study to identify and denounce the greater evils which he, as …show more content…

Mao states that “capitalism and love are in conflict with one another. Old men are in conflict with love. Thus, there is a strong tight between old men and capitalism” (Mao, p. 11). This quote, which was penned with regards to the injustice committed by older members of Miss Zhao’s family who forced her to marry someone she did not love, shows the distrust with which Mao holds older people, and how he believes they are often entirely incompatible with the greater new culture cause. Overall, anti-confucianism, the new culture movement, and the new youth fundamentally contain a strong distrust of the old in favor of the new, due to the association of older people with the imperialist confucian tradition. Lu Xun, a notable May 4th author, wrote an allegorical short story where the protagonist comes to the chilling conclusion that “Chinese society has been [cannibalizing] its young for millenia” (Wasserstrom, p. 121), showing how the older and more complicit members of Chinese society are detrimental to the younger, both in spirit by suppressing “innovation and individualism” (Wasserstrom, p. 121) as well as to the physical body, as Mao declares that the families and larger society have murdered young Miss Zhao. In this “murdering” of the new, Chinese society is also killing the hope for progress, and thus, stunting their own potential of being able to push off their international

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