2000 esssay
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PAAS 151 – Modern Chinese Culture
Three Body: Liu Cixin’s Call for the Chinese to Fully Enter the World Stage,
Despite their Anxieties
Chinese science fiction is not something unlike science fiction found in the
West. It draws on similar themes, questions, and anxieties that are shared in the
genre of both hemispheres. But Chinese science fiction is different from Western
science fiction: it was raised in a setting hostile to such discussions. The Cultural
Revolution still has an impact in China today, despite being a subject the
government is unwilling to acknowledge. Chinese author Han Song states that
many science fiction authors feel the “country’s rapid modernization [is] the stuff of
fiction,” which grounds the perfect setting in which to write science fiction: the
authors have seen the effects of incredible technological advancements (Song,
2013, 18).
Liu Cixin’s Three Body Trilogy is set over a long period of time, but begins
with the Cultural Revolution. This pivotal starting place sets the one for the series:
all hope is lost, and everyone is out to get you. This was the style of the Cultural
Revolution, but as Three Body teaches us, every civilisation in the universe must
fend for itself against the others. There are no allies. As the years pass and Earth
must face the reality that another civilisation, the Trisolarans, wishes to take over
Earth, a common humanity is declared, and nations must set aside their differences
and work for the common good.
Through a case study of the Three Body trilogy written by Liu Cixin, this
essay will examine the impact the Cultural Revolution continues to exert on
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contemporary science fiction and Chinese citizens themselves while simultaneously
voicing cultural anxieties pertaining to China’s contemporary view of the West. In
doing this, this paper will bring to light the importance of these historical events
even today, and that perhaps governmental silence is perpetuating the need for
writers to discuss this troubling history. This essay will not discuss the issue of
utopianism in science fiction, as it is not a common theme in the case study; it is,
however, a crucial discussion when looking at certain works of science fiction after
Tiananmen Square and the despair that followed. Themes of utopia or dystopia are
can be directly linked back to the Chinese political platform of the 1980s, as the
Party ran on the hope of creating a harmonious society. This essay will draw on
research on Three Body specifically, but also on broader research regarding science
fiction in China. The methods of research executed for the purpose of this paper
were reading and analysing the Three Body trilogy from a contemporary Chinese
perspective, as well as determining other scholars’ interpretations of the texts.
It is important to discuss the reality of the science fiction scene in China is
that it has not had success reaching a wide audience. Many readers hold the
impression that science fiction is nothing more than “stories for children” (Song,
2013, 15). But literary actors in Chinese cultural development of the early twentieth
century were very optimistic about science fiction in the Chinese context. Chinese
science fiction author Han Song identifies that “Liang [Qichao] and Lu [Xun]
believed that science fiction would help the spread of modern knowledge in China,
emancipate people’s minds and bring positive developments to a declining
civilization that was being surpassed by the industrialized Western nations” (2013,
15). In theory, science fiction was thought to have the capability of saving the
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nation, and for a while it did lift people’s spirits “as the genre instilled pride in
readers who saw China defeat Western countries with imaginary high-tech weapons
in the future” (2013, 15). Science fiction, as a genre, suffered during the Cultural
Revolution as it was criticized for being “something from corrupt Western culture
that could lead people astray” (2013, 16). The genre has only seen a renewal of
success since the 1990s, when China embraced an economic boom and writers
were granted more freedoms as China entered the global stage (2013, 16). By
studying this marginalised genre, one can study unvoiced anxieties as they appear
in the forms of these troubled characters and challenging situations.
But even today, “most Chinese people have no idea about science fiction;”
readers are “more interested in things that have a direct influence on their daily
lives” (Song, 2013, 21). There is more interest in building relationships with the
people around them “than on exploring the relationship of human beings to a vast
nature” (2013, 21). This is a China-specific issue that has its effect on science
fiction as a successful genre. This is certainly not a negative characteristic; it is
admirable to desire to understand daily life and build relationships with those who
share our lives. But those who do read Chinese science fiction, can observe the
relationships embedded in human nature. Science fiction also offers opportunities to
think about our own lives from a different perspective, as in the Three Body trilogy,
people are still people. The Three Body trilogy has sold “more than 500,000 copies
in China since the final installment” in 2010, numbers for which it quite the name in
the Chinese science fiction sphere (Thieret, 2015, 36). But given the current
population of China being over 1.3 billion, that is not meeting anywhere near a
majority audience. Science fiction simply does not exhibit the practicality which
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Chinese people are looking to find. Science fiction, and its often utopian or
dystopian settings appear to be an escape from practicality, which cannot help
Chinese people build relationships or solve day-to-day issues. This factor is crucial
to the debate of Chinese science fiction, and rather the reason why Chinese science
fiction might just never be successful, within China.
So, what can science fiction do within China? Han Song states that
contemporary Chinese science fiction seeks to place China in “hypothetically
extreme situations to see how people might respond to radical changes” (2013,
17). This is an vital distinction of the genre, as today sees the ever-growing
tensions between the United States in the west and China in the east. It begs the
question: what if the radical change forced Chinese nationalists to work with the
rest of the world? Three Body creates a world that forces the Chinese audience to
imagine themselves not at odds with the West, but working together with them.
Such an extreme example seems to suggest that such a radical situation should not
be the only cause for the two sides to get along.
Three Body can be used to examine the issues of American and Chinese
discourse, and the nations’ respective differences and difficulties understanding one
another. The author is writing at this critical point in the Chinese cultural period,
where the government is trying to protect Chinese culture and maintain the values
it has deemed important to the Chinese historical and cultural body. The author
does what Peter Gries has suggested is an answer to the problem of Chinese
harmony and American hegemony: focus on the common humanity of the two
nations (2007, 47). These two nations can work together without damaging their
own internal cultures. When given a common enemy, the world must work together
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to survive the universal threat, and in Three Body China is portrayed as ready, and
willing to fight for humanity. Obviously, this work of science fiction offers an intense
reason for a need for common humanity, but it can also describe the successes of
this solution for the problem of discourse.
For instance, the United Nations still plays a prominent figure in this Chinese-
focused novel. An organisation, formed historically to unite countries in a time
following great crises between nations, organises strategies for nations to follow.
China was originally included in the formation of the Unites Nations, proving from
an early point in modern history that China could cooperate to certain extents with
other nations. This is not a novel where China is portrayed as standing alone in a
science fictional catastrophe; it speaks to a need for humans to unite from our
differences and thrive together. In Liu Cixin’s fictional future, the two languages of
English and Chinese have moulded into one language while still entirely
encapsulating the intricacies of the two linguistic spheres. This plays on the
contemporary cultural anxiety that China will adopt too many loanwords from
English, endangering its linguistic niche.
In contrast, many works of American science fiction paint the Chinese as an
enemy determined to thwart intellectual progress. Obviously, Chinese cinema has
also played on this trope as mentioned above, but also in films like the Wolf Warrior
franchise. With this common theme in Three Body, this novel could be another
patriotic voice of the Chinese people: they are not the enemy, and willing to work
with like-minded individuals for a common cause. Rather interestingly, this is a very
explicit distinction in the novel. Rather than nations competing for or against
humanity’s best interest, organisations rise regardless or nationality against
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humanity’s survival against the Trisolarans. Though a character may have a
Chinese name or an English name, he or she acts on their own volition, on their
moral stance toward the outward threat rather than a nation’s decision. In the first
novel in the trilogy, the world’s population is split into those who wish to defend
Earth from the Trisolarans and those who want the Trisolarans to wipe out
humanity. This becomes the common fight: to thwart the other group from
succeeding its goal, regardless of national borders.
Characters within the novel, such as Ye Wenjie, can be seen as direct results
of the Cultural Revolution. Her disillusionment with humanity stems from the
injustices she and her family personally suffered during the Cultural Revolution.
When she is the first to contact the Trisolarans, even well-knowing it may end
humanity’s existence entirely, she “[invites] them to invade Earth, a decision that
echoes her mixed feelings about the Cultural Revolution” (Song, 2015, 10). It must
be remembered that the author himself lived through the Cultural Revolution, and
thus a personal bitterness may bleed into his writing. An argument can be made
that this negative attitude is purposefully adopted by a character who experienced
the Cultural Revolution. This critical point in Chinese history, which the current
government refuses to acknowledge, has potentially shaped a nation to be
disillusioned with humanity. Despite these disillusioned, destructive characters, Liu
Cixin creates a backdrop that this is not what China is. Though it suffers from these
anxieties, “a strong and powerful China is here to stay” (Thieret, 2015, 36). The
intellectuals existing in this dystopia may still be disillusioned with society, but the
focus is drawn to their values, disassociating them with the current situation in
China. This is because Liu sees that “the reality of worldwide risks demands far
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greater attention than any perceived risks to the Chinese nation…one could say that
this is because China and the world face the same risks in the contemporary world”
(Thieret, 2015, 36). China can partake in the global sphere, and Liu wants his
readers to understand as well that China can play as a positive actor on the world
stage.
The science fiction literary world still holds its inner anxieties regarding the
Cultural Revolution of the 1960s. Three Body has a significant setting based in the
Cultural Revolution, and is not exactly friendly toward the brutal history of the time
period. Though it has been over fifty years, the author still conveyed concern about
discussing the topic when asked in an interview with The Guardian (Barnett, 2016).
Though it is a very real and very recent part of China’s history, the government is
still extremely strict about content released that in any way touches on the subject
of the horrors of the Cultural Revolution. But the novel was not censored by the
government, and has received widespread success both within and outside China.
This is a curious factor, as science fiction that challenged the ethicality of Chinese
politics was shut down by the government in the 1980s (Song, 2015, 7). Could the
allowance of such controversial opinions in Three Body be a sign of a shift in the
Communist Party’s attitudes toward public opinion? The Party will take all
precautions to ignore the situation, as they created the Road to Revival exhibit
which extracted the Cultural Revolution from the Party’s journey to modernity
(Denton, 2014, 1).
Looking at where China has come from, and the anxieties it still experiences
from its past, Liu and other Chinese science fiction authors believe that “the future
looks more colorful and positive than ever and more open to the spirit of discovery”
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(Song, 2013, 18). Relating to this, he also believes that “China should shoulder
more responsibility for solving the problems faced by human beings in a changing
world” as it becomes increasingly involved in international affairs (Song, 2013, 18).
This is again calling on China’s shared humanity with the rest of the world: it does
not have to exist in a bubble to thrive. Current events in China are constantly
contradicting: the shutdown of the internet, the sharing of technological culture
with the west, and increased economic agreements with the outside world. It is as
if the government cannot decide how it should react to the interconnectivity of the
international playing field.
Three Body exists in a culture that is unsure about science fiction, stagnating
its ability to reach widespread success. But the ideas the trilogy discusses are would
be beneficial to the Chinese society, despite being hidden behind stunning
technology and the threat of alien invasion. Three Body speaks to humanity’s
eternal problem of not being able to get along, something that China is
experiencing on a very real front today. The differences in Western and Chinese
discourse do not fundamentally separate them: it is something to work on and learn
to understand, which can benefit both nations in an exchange of culture. But China
still must face its inner demons found in the Cultural Revolution, and the
government’s refusal to acknowledge this past. This inability to take responsibility
within its own country could have devastating effects if executed likewise on the
global stage. Facing international distress can bring opposites together, but
hopefully it does not have to come to the threat of aliens for these sides to realise
that.
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Works Cited
Barnett, David. “'People hope my book will be China's Star Wars': Liu Cixin on
China's exploding sci-fi Scene.” The Guardian, 14 December 2016.
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/dec/14/liu-cixin-chinese-sci-fi-universal-
the-three-body-problem.
Denton, Kirk A. “China Dreams and the ‘Road to Revival’.” Origins, vol. 8, no. 3, 2014, pp. 1-2.
Gries, Peter H. “Harmony, Hegemony, & U.S.-China Relations.” World Literature
Today, vol. 81, no. 4, 2007, pp. 44–47.
Song, Han. “Chinese Science Fiction: A Response to Modernization.” Science Fiction
Studies, vol. 40, no. 1, 2013, pp. 15–21. JSTOR, JSTOR,
www.jstor.org/stable/10.5621/sciefictstud.40.1.0015.
Song, Mingwei. “After 1989: The New Wave of Chinese Science Fiction.” China
Perspectives, vol. 101, no. 1, 2015, pp. 7–13. JSTOR, JSTOR,
www.jstor.org/stable/43392960.
Thieret, Adrian. “Society and Utopia in Liu Cixin.” China Perspectives, vol. 101, no.
1, 2015, pp. 33–39. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/43392963.