The Summer 2014 edition of Pathlight magazine focuses on issues to do
with gender -- femininity, masculinity, and things neither or both.
The men of a migrant family all fall prey to the same wasting sickness
in Li Zishu's hallucinatory "The Northern Border"; male-female
interactions are handled with superb subtlety in Fu Yuli's "That
Damned Thing She Said", and Tian Er's "The Gift of a Cut" is about
what it sounds like. There's a decidedly experimental bent to this
issue's stories, particular with Wei Meng's "Pregant" and Chen
Mengya's "Brocade", while the poetry tips towards the political with
Luo Feng's Hong Kong based point of view.
Language
English
Pages
257
Format
Kindle Edition
Publisher
Paper Republic
Release
October 03, 2014
Pathlight: New Chinese Writing (Summer 2014) - Gender
The Summer 2014 edition of Pathlight magazine focuses on issues to do
with gender -- femininity, masculinity, and things neither or both.
The men of a migrant family all fall prey to the same wasting sickness
in Li Zishu's hallucinatory "The Northern Border"; male-female
interactions are handled with superb subtlety in Fu Yuli's "That
Damned Thing She Said", and Tian Er's "The Gift of a Cut" is about
what it sounds like. There's a decidedly experimental bent to this
issue's stories, particular with Wei Meng's "Pregant" and Chen
Mengya's "Brocade", while the poetry tips towards the political with
Luo Feng's Hong Kong based point of view.