Road to the Destination the Road Novel Essay

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Road to the Destination

The road novel is one of most popular and indeed effective genres of novel writing. With 200 to 400 pages with which to work, novel writers can truly weave stories of learning and coming-of-age set against a backdrop of constant location shifting. After all, encountering different locations and people not only causes a character -- or person -- to grow, it sets that growth apart from stagnation and the status quo very well for a reader or fellow character. In fact, the main character or protagonist often learns most about himself while on the road in a road novel.

Very few authors chose the road or at least a state of constant flux for a short story, however. There simply is not enough space in a short story for such dealings. One exception comes to mind: Vladimir Nabokov's "Spring in Fialta" occurs in a constant state of flux and travel and never in stagnation.

Similarly, Wang Anyi's "The Destination" is a short story of flux and change, and of constantly striving towards a particular destination rather that staying put. The short story begins with a train, and the anticipation of arriving at what purports to be a final "destination."

Anyi writes, "Over the loudspeaker came the announcement, 'The train is arriving at Shanghai terminal ...

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' Dozing passengers opened their eyes. "We're arriving at Shanghai.'" (Anyi, 116)

At the very beginning, we as readers are caught up in a sense of excitement about Shanghai. Here is an ultramodern city, at least compared to the rural areas in China and even Beijing, and even before being introduced to any of the short story's characters, we expect a lot from the city with the build-up Anyi provides for it.

And indeed, for the protagonist, Chen Xin, it is an exciting moment, but just in a different way than we expected: For him, it's a homecoming. He is returning to his home after years in the countryside.

However, as we soon begin to learn, Chen Xin's city of Shanghai has changed strikingly since he was last there, and many times, Chen Xin struggles against the moniker of outsider: First on the train he asserts that he is returning home to Shanghai, and then on the bus on the way to the labor market, he almost gets into a fight with someone who calls him an outsider.

The basic purpose here, from an analytical standpoint, is that Anyi is establishing that Chen Xin has no home. He is a vagabond. His older brother is obviously at home; he is married with a kid and living in the.....

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"Road To The Destination The Road Novel", 27 January 2005, Accessed.22 May. 2025,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/road-destination-road-novel-61155