Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress Study Guide

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress by Dai Sijie

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress is the story of two young boys, Luo and an unnamed musician, who are sent into the mountains for reeducation in the wake of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. There they discover a shared gift for storytelling and a passion for the daughter of a local seamstress. The two hone their craft for storytelling by reading contraband French novels and are particularly taken with the works of Balzac.

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress Characters

  • Narrator , unnamed teenage boy
  • Luo , the narrators best friend
  • The Little Seamstress , the daughter of a famous local tailor, a rare beauty with no formal education and cannot read well, so Luo and the narrator read to her.
  • The Village Headman , the leader of the village to which the narrator and Luo are sent for re-education, is a 50-year-old "ex-opium farmer turned Communist cadre." One day, he blackmails Luo to fix his teeth in return for not sending the narrator to jail.
  • Four-Eyes , the son of a writer and a poet, must wear thick glasses to compensate for his nearsightedness. He possesses a suitcase full of forbidden "reactionary" Western novels that the Narrator and Luo covet, and eventually steal. He is referred to as a character who is accustomed to humiliation. He ends up leaving the mountain when his mother convinces the government to end his re-education early and gets Four-Eyes a job at a newspaper.
  • The Miller is an old man who lives alone and is a repository of local folk songs. The Miller narrates one part of the novel and provides songs to the boys, who then relate them to Four-Eyes. He is one of the characters who chooses not to be involved with the revolution.
  • The Tailor , the father of the Little Seamstress and the only tailor on the mountain, is a rich and popular man. He is old but energetic and widely travelled. At one point in the story, the narrator recounts The Count of Monte Cristo to him while he spends the night with the narrator and Luo. Through this experience, he gains a slight air of sophistication, and the story begins to influence the clothes that he makes.
  • The Gynaecologist , a man around forty, with "grizzled lanky hair [and] sharp features," performs the Little Seamstress' illegal abortion in return for a book by Balzac.

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