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When
I was ten years old, the Da Ban Yi anti-Japanese incident
occurred. From a crevice in the front door of our house,
I watch the Japanese artillery forces as a move from Tainan
to Da Ban Yi. Later, I overheard my older brother talking
about his experiences with the Japanese military during
his stands as a military aid draftee. I listen to what
the older people in our Billy said about the atrocities
the Japanese committed in Da Ban Yi. Later, when I was
a bit older, I bought a book about the history of Taiwanese
rebels. The book recorded over ten incidents of so-called
rebellions such as the Da Ban Yi incident. It was clear
to me then that when our rulers wrote about the history
of such incidents, they would always twist the facts and
create stories. I saw the contrast between the ruthless
rulers and the righteous people. This is whether a meaty
side to live my life as a writer. I wanted to write stories
to describe and correct the twisted history offered by
the rulers. Describing the miserable lives of the colonize
people and their protests against the cruelty of their
rulers naturally became my primary concern.
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The
Da Ban Yi incident mentioned here occurred in July-August of
1915 in a suburb of Tainan. The uprising was led by Yu Qingfeng
(mentioned in "The Newspaper Boy" as a deterrent for villagers
in Mr. Yang's hometown to rebel against the Japanese sugar company,
since Yu Qingfeng, a Taiwanese rebel, was brutally executed
by Japanese authorities), Jiang Ding, and Lou Jun. the rebel
troops were defeated after 50 days of fierce battle, and all
three leaders were sentenced to death, along with several hundred
of their followers.
Throughout Yang Kui's work, a
thread of Taiwanese nationalism is present, although it is not
as visible in his writing as it is in other Taiwanese writers
of this. Many of the Taiwanese writers took up writing hoping
to rouse their patriots from their "sloth, apathy, and intellectual
sterility in the face of Japanese barbarity." Yang's contemporaries,
such as the writers Lai (1894-1943), Wu Zhouliu (1900-1976),
and Zhu Tianren (1903-1947) per trade specific cross-sections
of Taiwanese society in a chilling realistic light. In these
writer's stories, those who appear abominable are not only the
Japanese conquerors but there "Taiwanese vassles who are only
two year to surrender their Chinese identity, including their
names, to qualify them to enjoy the special privileges of a
naturalized Japanese citizen."
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