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> thanks for all the down votes, guys This may be why: First you described a defect in the story. But you claim such defects have "always been a problem" in science fiction. So this story is unsatisfying to you in company with a slew of other works, many of which will have been award winners. Then you speculated that this particular story might have won an award only because it was Chinese, as if the other finalists are likely to have been better. Yet you've made it clear that you wouldn't expect them to be. So your initial criticism, that the story falls short as so much of science fiction does, gives way to a criticism of this peculiar story--but you have only singled it out for being written by a Chinese author. So, it is ordinarily bad, yes; but it is particularly bad for being Chinese. I do not think you meant it like that, but that is certainly how you wrote it. As for the premise of this and similar stories: It is commonly held that technological advancement disproportionately benefits the ruling classes, while the workers are made to grind away as usual, life having been little altered. This line of thought may vary in intensity and nuance with place and regime. "Folding Beijing" and many stories like it draw up a simplified world--all fictive worlds are simplified--in which this tenet rings particularly true. Probably the author intends to play with a view on our world as it is, or that part of it which she is most concerned with. Certainly she wants to lay hold of a reader's emotion, to keep them reading (we do not all share your desires in speculative fiction): who does not care about what their own lot may become, or the lots of their neighbors? We may even feel this way when our lots are presented figuratively, as in a world that looks a little too close to our own for being so different--or a little too different for being so clearly our own. Many of us are weak for this sort of thing. But I think it's disingenuous to claim that such a story only does this. It may not serve the function you want it to; but then, if you're used to that in science fiction, you should be expecting it any time you see the label. (If you want to know, I personally thought this one dull, but I feel that way about a lot of science fiction, too.) |
I wasn't referring to sci-fi in general. I was talking about my personal experience. I specifically had "when I read sci-fi story" in the original comment.
> So, it is ordinarily bad, yes; but it is particularly bad for being Chinese.
Yes, all politics behind this particular piece winning the award is my speculation, but I wasn't saying that "it is particularly bad for being Chinese". It would be hard for someone who doesn't familiar with Chinese netizen culture to comprehend such speculation. Go through comment section of the link provided by rabboRubble (https://read.douban.com/reader/ebook/20769128/). Like PR measures described in "Century of the self", <Folding BJ> is covered a lot in the news and planting fabricated idea among certain groups. Most reasonable Chinese sci-fi readers come to the same speculation as me (top review/most voted) while other lesser minds fail to see it, thus the chaos in comment section mentioned in the above link.