Red Dust: A Path Through China

Cover of Red Dust: A Path Through China by Ma Jian
Author: Ma Jian
Publisher: Pantheon
Year: 2001
Language: en
Edition: First Edition
Pages: 324
ISBN-13: 9780375420597
Dimensions:
Height: 9.75 Inches
Length: 6.5 Inches
Weight: 1.3344 Pounds
Width: 1 Inches
Dewey Decimal: 915.104/5
Editorial overview Touché

Red Dust: A Path Through China by Ma Jian, published by Pantheon on November 6, 2001, is a first edition that spans 324 pages. This book chronicles Ma Jian’s journey through some of the most remote and rugged regions of China during 1983. Faced with personal turmoil, including a failed marriage and estrangement from his daughter, he leaves Beijing in search of understanding and purpose. His travels take him across deserts, mountains, and icy rivers, revealing the stark realities of life in these areas.

Throughout his three-year trek, Ma Jian encounters various hardships, from staying in unsanitary inns to adopting unconventional means of survival, such as becoming a roadside barber. His experiences reflect a deep exploration of China’s vastness and complexity, as he grapples with themes of disappointment and the search for enlightenment. The narrative offers insights into the country’s landscapes and cultural nuances, emphasizing its scale and the sense of otherness that defines it. This edition presents a unique perspective on travel and personal discovery, making it a significant contribution to the subjects of biography and travel in China.


Official synopsis Publisher

1983 Ma Jian, a photographer, painter, poet, and writer, set out for the most remote and roughest parts of China. Dispirited and fearful, accused at work of having “a sluggish mentality,” confronted with a failed marriage, an estranged young daughter, and a girlfriend involved with another man, he abandons Beijing and a life he can no longer endure. Red Dust is the account of his travels, a remarkably written and subtly moving journey toward understanding.

A dropout, a fugitive from the police, a Buddhist in search of enlightenment, Ma Jian embarks on a three-year trek that takes him from the deepest south to the western provinces and Tibet, journeying across deserts, over mountains, through icy rivers. And as he travels to increasingly remote areas, his circumstances become increasingly straitened: He stays in filthy inns, sleeping four to a plank bed, learning to wait until his companions fall asleep and then lying on top of them. To support himself, he buys a pair of scissors and becomes a roadside barber, sells scouring powder as tooth whitener, lives by his wits posing as an enlightened religious man.

His sense of humor and sanity keep him intact—”Danger is not exciting,” he tells a friend, “it’s just proof of your incompetence.” The greatest hardship he faces is disappointment—or perhaps his own honesty. Tibet offers no enlightenment (“Is Buddha saving man or is man saving Buddha?” he asks); his own restlessness undermines his yearning for love. Ma Jian’s portrait of his country provides no understanding of its enigmas, no neat generalizations, no sweeping predictions. It simply reminds us of China’s scale, its shadows, and, ultimately, its otherness.

FAQ
What is “Red Dust: A Path Through China” about?
This page includes the available description and bibliographic details for “Red Dust: A Path Through China” by Ma Jian. Synopsis preview: 1983 Ma Jian, a photographer, painter, poet, and writer, set out for the most remote and roughest parts of China. Dispirited and fearful, accused at work of having “a sluggish mentality,” confronted with a failed marriag…
Who is the author of “Red Dust: A Path Through China”?
“Red Dust: A Path Through China” is credited to Ma Jian.
When was “Red Dust: A Path Through China” published?
Publisher: Pantheon. Year: 2001.
What is the ISBN for “Red Dust: A Path Through China”?
ISBN-13: 9780375420597.
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
Language: en. Pages: 324. Edition: First Edition.

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