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The Japanese police would offer a low price for land,
then intimidate the farmers with police force until they acquiesced.
The two story lines merge as the seen cut back to Tokyo. Mr.
Yang grows close with a fellow newspaper delivery boy, Tanaka,
and tells them about the bleak situation in Taiwan. Twenty days
after he finds the newspaper job, Mr. Yang is fired, and is
turned out into the
streets
once again. Shortly afterwards, he receives several letters
from his family in Taiwan, the second batch informing him that
his mother has committed suicide so as not to be a burden to
him.
The situation seems unbearable.
Suddenly, Mr. Yang's friend Tanaka comes to him in great excitement,
and introduces him to Mr. Ito, a labor group leader, who helps
Mr. Yang find another job. The story line accelerates at a rapid
pace and ends abruptly when Mr. Yang, strongly influenced by
his participation in the Japanese Labor group returns to Taiwan
with visions of exposing the "ugly smell of oppressed people."
"The Newspaper Boy" bears strong
similarities to the Japanese proletarian literature of the time.
One of the few differences is that in Yang's work, undercurrents
of Taiwanese nationalism are present. The Japanese proletarian
writers were strongly influenced by the upsurge of leftist movements
of the period. Likewise, Yang Kui was probably influenced by
the Taiwanese political activist described earlier. Almost by
definition, proletarian literature is "committed to depicting
the proletariat in a sympathetic light while painting the capitalistic
in demonic colors." This certainly rings true in "The Newspaper
Boy" worthy struggling workers and peasants are pitted against
the choral newspaper bonds and the Japanese police. was Yang
Kui's purpose the same as the Japanese proletarian writers?
Many of the Japanese proletarian writers attempted to describe
the "gradual awakening of the workers to the truth of the class
struggle underlining their individual grievances in the advantages
of unity and organizing to present a common front for their
demands." while elements of this are present in Yang's "The
Newspaper Boy," this work does not fit exactly within the framework
of the typical Japanese proletarian literature. According to
Yang Kui the masses will be awakened to the truth "truth of
the class struggle" through the educated sector of society.
Yang places great emphasis upon the pursuit of education, equating
it with the pursuit of success. Once the story's protagonist
Mr. Yang fulfills his mother's sole desire of becoming a stable
"work study" student in Japan, he will be able to return to
Taiwan to lead his fellow villagers out of their misery, using
his newly acquired Dolly to guide him along. Yang Kui attributes
his first interest in writing to a specific incident in his
life:
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