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The Dissident
 
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The Dissident (Hardcover)

de Nell Freudenberger (Author)
3.0étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (1 évaluation de client)
Price: CDN$ 32.95 & se qualifie pour Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour des commandes de plus de CDN$ 39. Détails
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From Publishers Weekly

Freudenberger fulfills the promise of her 2003 collection of short stories, Lucky Girls, in her expansive first novel. Yuan Zhao, a Chinese performance artist entangled in the subversive community of the Beijing East Village (an artist enclave located in Beijing's "industrial dump"), moves to Los Angeles for an exhibition of his work and to teach studio art to gifted students at the St. Anselm's School for Girls. Upon arrival at the Traverses', his host family, Zhao finds himself in a domestic minefield: Cece Travers, the family matriarch, is having an affair with her brother-in-law, Phil. Meanwhile, her children fumble through adolescence, and her husband, psychiatrist Gordon, phones in his familial obligations. Freudenberger juxtaposes Zhao's early artist days in the East and his unrequited love for the woman he left behind with his solitary life in Los Angeles, where he grows obsessed with a Chinese art student. Under a blanket of cultural misunderstandings and xenophobia, Freudenberger tackles big questions about art: what makes an artist; how artists and writers borrow from each other; and how they appropriate details from the lives of their friends and families. Freudenberger sometimes missteps into humdrum Hollywood satire and uninspired relationship drama, but Zhao is distinctly fresh; it's when describing his journey that Freudenberger's novel takes flight. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


From Booklist

Freudenberger's first novel (after short story collection Lucky Girls, 2003) is ambitious, crossing cultures and dealing with art and politics, love and betrayal, and--ultimately--deception. Title character Yuan Zhao, known in his native China for political activism and performance as well as graphic art, takes a residency to teach at a girls' high school while living with the Travers of Beverly Hills--psychiatrist Gordon and his wife, Cece, a volunteer at her daughter's school, and teenagers Olivia and Max. Yuan's first-person account, with background of his life and the Chinese artists' rebellion, is interspersed with narrative about the Travers family: Cece's longtime affair with Gordon's brother Phil, Olivia's possible eating disorder, Max's discontent and suicidal tendencies, Phil's womanizing and commitment problems, and Gordon's sister Joan viewing life as grist for her novels. Yuan's involvement with talented student June Wang signals trouble, but there are confusing indicators before a major revelation. Still, although the climax is less than satisfying, getting there is generally a pleasure, given Freudenberger's facile, insightful prose and strong characterizations. Major promotion is likely to generate demand. Michele Leber
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Artists and performers, Oct. 8 2006
Par Friederike Knabe (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Inspired by Chinese experimental art of the early nineties, Freudenberger builds a story broadly based on some of the members of the Beijing "East Village" experimental artistic community. Primarily told from the perspective of a fictitious member, Yuan Zhao, the narrative moves between the group in China and life in Los Angeles where "Mr. Yuan" experiences a different world as a resident artist, hosted by a wealthy Beverly Hills family.

Interleafed with Zhao's narrative is the story of his host family, the Travers. They are depicted as a rather dysfunctional family of four, living parallel lives with little more than superficial interaction. They appear to have little interest in the "Dissident". Cece, the Travers family's "mother hen", attempts to maintain the facade of a harmonious family. She is Mr. Yuan's main interlocutor, yet, her mind is not focused on her guest but rather on her own emotional hang-ups involving her brother-in-law. Father, son and daughter, while present physically, are mentally elsewhere. Revealing only the bare minimum facts about them, the author doesn't make them come alive as characters and they remain two-dimensional stereotypes. The sister-in-law, an aspiring author, has her own reasons for approaching the "Dissident". She may be closer to discovering some truths about him that escaped the others.

Despite the lack of depth of character development, much space is given to describing the trials and tribulations of the members of the Travers household. The narrative flows quite easily as each short chapter zooms in on one of the main characters. Seeing them all together at a Thanksgiving dinner reveals a plastered over façade. Yuan Zhao appears to be quite disconnected from this reality and retreats increasingly into his own world. From the outset, he has raises questions about his own identity, his background and the quality of his art. Why was he chosen for the prestigious art fellowship? Why, for example, does he, as a modern artist spend his time copying a famous classical Chinese scroll of the 13th century instead of preparing for his grand exhibition? Is he a dissident at all? He feels that he doesn't belong in the role he plays in L.A. Between the flashbacks to Zhao's youth with his participation in the experimental performance scene around his courageous cousin X, and his observations of his American surroundings, it is left to the reader to slowly piece together who Yuan Zhao really is.

Freudenberger creates an animated and engaging picture of life among the artists of Beijing's the East Village. The group had developed a performance style of what could be called living art. The performers engaged in awkward or provocative poses, mostly naked or covered in some organic paste. The aim was to challenge traditional art forms. Audiences were invited, foreign journalists and art scholars were especially interested. So were the police who often arrested the artists right after the show. A performance was itself the artistic piece and with its dismantling the artwork disappeared. Could it be recreated at another time and in another environment? Probably not, unless, of course, a photographer captured the scene. As he did, his own artistic vision of the living sculpture superimposed itself on the original art. This invites the question of who in the end is the artist?

A popular performance was called "Something that is not art". Yuan Zhao introduces this theme in a competition to his art class at a prestigious girls' high school where he volunteers as the guest teacher. The adolescent girls are not easy to deal with and a series of damaging events potentially undermines the teacher. The result of the competition is not what is expected, demonstrating the limitation of imagination of the school authorities as well as most of students.

With "Dissident" Freudenberger has created an intriguing portrait of a representative of the Chinese artist community starting with the early nineties. Here, her characters are alive and realistic. Yuan Zhao, while surprisingly candid in his self analysis, is a captivating complex character. By way of his account of his past the reader is introduced to a fascinating aspect of Chinese society that would normally be out of reach. On the other hand, unfortunately, Freudenberger is not as successful in the characterization of the Travers and the Beverly Hills environment. While her style is easygoing and direct, the reader would have liked more cohesion and integration of loose ends. [Friederike Knabe]
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