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Er Tai Gao : In Search of My Homeland: A Memoir of a Chinese Labor Camp
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In 1957, twenty-two-year-old art teacher Er Tai Gao came to the attention of the Communist Chinese authorities with his groundbreaking essay “On Beauty,” in which he argued that the nature of what is beautiful is both subjective and individual—a position in direct opposition to government policy. Labeled a “rightist” by the Mao regime, Gao was sent to a labor camp in China's harsh western desert, where in just three years 90 percent of his fellow prisoners died. It would be the first of the scholar's three convictions for subversive thought and behavior. After his last imprisonment, in the aftermath of the Tiananmen Square protests, Gao and his wife, Maya, escaped to Hong Kong, and in 1993 were offered political asylum by the United States.
condition: | |
category: | Books > Foreign Language Books > Books in English > |
publisher: | Harper-Collins, 2009. |
item number / ISBN: | 9780060881269 |
binding: | hardcover (in original dust jacket) |
pages: | 529 |
language: | English |