"Blind paradise" (Nh іn nness ênđườngmù) is a novel published in 1988 by female writer Dương Thhhuhng. This is the first Vietnamese novel published in English in the USA. [1] Due to its political view, it is currently prohibited in Vietnam
Please play the main character of Hang and visit your uncle by train. In the train, she remembers her life and various stories about her family through flashback.
Hang is a narrator in the story. While traveling to Moscow, she explained the major events in her childhood. When she looked back she realized she was determined to be responsible for her family, and it made her family very miserable. She understood that this is not necessarily her fate. When waiting for Vietnam to leave Russia, she saw a group of happy, laughing and free Japanese young students. She wants to become a Japanese, and this race does not have the same burden as their people. She decided to do something to make her happy - due to her responsibility to her mother, she sacrifices her daughter to help her rotten brother - it is happy There was not. [2]
^ Bookmark staff. "Blind paradise" BookRag. BookRags, Inc.. Acquired on April 11, 2016
Even Duon 's third novel, "Window of Heaven" itself, was an attack against the Communist government which took over Vietnam after the war with the United States in 1975. This novel does not have "paradise", it exists only in the optic nerve. It is blind in place of one of the characters. Headlines refer to Communist leaders who are openly talking about and producing what they call "Peasant's paradise" or "worker's paradise", but that is because they are the other Communist countries Like obviously is a failure. There is no paradise; only blind people can promote heaven based on flawed political theory, and this theory never succeeds.
The struggle with Tan's oppressor in a blind paradise reflects their determination to live with the patience and dignity of modern Vietnamese victims. Indeed, paradise is more like a survival novel than a war novel and has passed completely through Vietnam's intervention in the United States for many years. While some of the other works by author Duong Thu Huong show warfront from the front - she has personal experience - this novel depicts the domestic war and the domestic war in the north of the DMZ There. Duong Thu Huong has unveiled an indelible portrait depicting the sacrifice of three women and men from northern Vietnam and the communist society. The hero in heaven represents a real woman in Vietnam - the extreme one drawn by Passion Phuong of Graham Green's "quiet American" is not the "all metal" prostitute of Stanley Kubrick Extreme depiction Despite their normal occupation and status as second-class citizens, women in the heavens are extraordinary.
"Paradise for blind people" is a beautiful portrait of three Vietnamese women who strive to survive in society, obedience to men is expected, and the corruption of the Communist Party is suppressing every dream. We gradually learned about her family's tragedy as land reform torn their villages through Hango's slum streets and the hang of a young 20-year-old who grew up with intermittent beauty. Hang struggles between the terrible self-sacrifice of her mother and the bitter of her aunt, when her uncle Chinh's political loyalty replaces the family's devotion, and she can revenge I could not forgive. Only by removing the past we can find dignity and the future.