Pearl S. Buck

Pearl S. Buck

Pearl Buck, ca. 1972.
Born Pearl Sydenstricker
(1892-06-26)June 26, 1892
Hillsboro, West Virginia, U.S.
Died March 6, 1973(1973-03-06) (aged 80)
Danby, Vermont, U.S.
Occupation Writer, Teacher
Nationality American
Subject english
Notable awards

Pulitzer Prize
1932

Nobel Prize in Literature
1938
Spouse John Lossing Buck (1917–1935)
Richard Walsh (1935–1960) until his death

Signature
Pearl S. Buck
Traditional Chinese 賽珍珠
Simplified Chinese 赛珍珠
Literal meaning precious Pearl Sy'

Pearl Sydenstricker Buck (June 26, 1892 – March 6, 1973), also known by her Chinese name Sai Zhenzhu (Chinese: ), was an American writer and novelist. As the daughter of missionaries, Buck spent most of her life before 1934 in Zhenjiang, China. Her novel The Good Earth was the best-selling fiction book in the United States in 1931 and 1932 and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1932. In 1938, she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature "for her rich and truly epic descriptions of peasant life in China and for her biographical masterpieces".[1] She was the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature.

After returning to the United States in 1935, she continued writing prolifically and became a prominent advocate of the rights of women and minority groups, and wrote widely on Asian cultures, becoming particularly well known for her efforts on behalf of Asian and mixed-race adoption.

Early life

The Stulting House at the Pearl Buck Birthplace in Hillsboro, West Virginia

Originally named Comfort by her parents,[2] Pearl Sydenstricker was born in Hillsboro, West Virginia, to Caroline Stulting (1857–1921) and Absalom Sydenstricker. Her parents, Southern Presbyterian missionaries, traveled to China soon after their marriage on July 8, 1880, but returned to the United States for Pearl's birth. When Pearl was five months old, the family arrived in China, first in Huai'an and then in 1896 moved to Zhenjiang (then often known as Jingjiang or, in the postal, Tsingkiang), near Nanking.[3]

Of her siblings who survived into adulthood, Edgar Sydenstricker (1881–1936) had a distinguished career in epidemiology as an official with the Milbank Memorial Fund[4] and Grace Sydenstricker Yaukey (1899–1994) was a writer who wrote young adult books and books about Asia under the pen name Cornelia Spencer.

Chinese man in Zhenjiang, c. 1900

She recalled in her memoir that she lived in "several worlds", one a "small, white, clean Presbyterian world of my parents", and the other the "big, loving merry not-too-clean Chinese world", and there was no communication between them.[5] The Boxer Uprising greatly affected the family; their Chinese friends deserted them, and Western visitors decreased. Her father, convinced that no Chinese could wish him harm, stayed behind as the rest of the family went to Shanghai for safety. A few years later, Pearl was enrolled in Miss Jewell's School there, and was dismayed at the racist attitudes of the other students, few of whom could speak any Chinese. Both of her parents felt strongly that Chinese were their equals (they forbade the use of the word heathen), and she was raised in a bilingual environment, tutored in English by her mother, in the local dialect by her Chinese playmates, and in classical Chinese by a Chinese scholar named Mr. Kung. She also read voraciously, especially, in spite of her father's disapproval, the novels of Charles Dickens, which she later said she read through once a year for the rest of her life.[6]

In 1911, Pearl left China to attend Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Lynchburg, Virginia, in the United States, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in 1914 and a member of Kappa Delta Sorority. Although she had not intended to return to China, much less become a missionary, she quickly applied to the Presbyterian Board when her father wrote that her mother was seriously ill. From 1914 to 1932, she served as a Presbyterian missionary, but her views later became highly controversial during the Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy, leading to her resignation.[7]

Career in China

In 1914, Pearl returned to China. She married an agricultural economist missionary, John Lossing Buck, on May 13, 1917, and they moved to Suzhou, Anhui Province, a small town on the Huai River (not to be confused with the better-known Suzhou in Jiangsu Province). This region she describes in her books The Good Earth and Sons.

From 1920 to 1933, the Bucks made their home in Nanjing, on the campus of the University of Nanking, where they both had teaching positions. She taught English literature at the private, church-run University of Nanking,[8] Ginling College and at the National Central University. In 1920, the Bucks had a daughter, Carol, afflicted with phenylketonuria. In 1921, Buck's mother died of a tropical disease, sprue, and shortly afterward her father moved in. In 1924, they left China for John Buck's year of sabbatical and returned to the United States for a short time, during which Pearl Buck earned her master's degree from Cornell University. In 1925, the Bucks adopted Janice (later surnamed Walsh). That autumn, they returned to China.[7]

The tragedies and dislocations that Buck suffered in the 1920s reached a climax in March 1927, during the "Nanking Incident". In a confused battle involving elements of Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist troops, Communist forces, and assorted warlords, several Westerners were murdered. Since her father Absalom insisted, as he had in 1900 in the face of the Boxers, the family decided to stay in Nanjing until the battle reached the city. When violence broke out, a poor Chinese family invited them to hide in their hut while the family house was looted. The family spent a day terrified and in hiding, after which they were rescued by American gunboats. They traveled to Shanghai and then sailed to Japan, where they stayed for a year, after which they moved back to Nanjing. Pearl later said that this year in Japan showed her that not all Japanese were militarists. When she returned from Japan in late 1927, Pearl devoted herself in earnest to the vocation of writing. Friendly relations with prominent Chinese writers of the time, such as Xu Zhimo and Lin Yutang, encouraged her to think of herself as a professional writer. She wanted to fulfill the ambitions denied to her mother, but she also needed money to support herself if she left her marriage, which had become increasingly lonely, and since the mission board could not provide it, she also needed money for Carol’s specialized care. Pearl went once more to the States in 1929 to find long-term care for Carol, and while there, Richard Walsh, editor at John Day publishers in New York, accepted her novel East Wind: West Wind. She and Richard began a relationship that would result in marriage and many years of professional teamwork. Back in Nanking, she retreated every morning to the attic of her university bungalow and within the year completed the manuscript for The Good Earth.[9]

Pearl Buck in 1932, about the time The Good Earth was published.
Photo: Arnold Genthe

When John Lossing Buck took the family to Ithaca the next year, Pearl accepted an invitation to address a luncheon of Presbyterian women at the Astor Hotel in New York City. Her talk was titled “Is There a Case for the Foreign Missionary?” and her answer was a barely qualified “no”. She told her American audience that she welcomed Chinese to share her Christian faith, but argued that China did not need an institutional church dominated by missionaries who were too often ignorant of China and arrogant in their attempts to control it. When the talk was published in Harper's magazine,[10] the scandalized reaction led Pearl to resign her position with the Presbyterian Board. In 1934, Pearl left China, never to return, while John Lossing Buck remained and later remarried.[11]

Career in the United States

In 1935 the Bucks were divorced in Reno, Nevada,[12] and she later married Richard Walsh. He offered her advice and affection which, her biographer concludes, "helped make Pearl's prodigious activity possible". The couple lived in Pennsylvania until his death in 1960.[9]

During the Cultural Revolution, Buck, as a preeminent American writer of Chinese village life, was denounced as an "American cultural imperialist".[13] Buck was "heartbroken" when she was prevented from visiting China with Richard Nixon in 1972. Her 1962 novel Satan Never Sleeps described the Communist tyranny in China.

Pearl S. Buck died of lung cancer on March 6, 1973, in Danby, Vermont, and was interred in Green Hills Farm in Perkasie, Pennsylvania. She designed her own tombstone. The grave marker is inscribed with Chinese characters representing the name Pearl Sydenstricker.[14]

Nobel Prize in Literature

In 1938 the Nobel Prize committee in awarding the prize said:

By awarding this year's Prize to Pearl Buck for the notable works which pave the way to a human sympathy passing over widely separated racial boundaries and for the studies of human ideals which are a great and living art of portraiture, the Swedish Academy feels that it acts in harmony and accord with the aim of Alfred Nobel's dreams for the future.[15]

In her speech to the Academy, she took as her topic "The Chinese Novel." She explained, "I am an American by birth and by ancestry", but "my earliest knowledge of story, of how to tell and write stories, came to me in China." After an extensive discussion of classic Chinese novels, especially Romance of the Three Kingdoms, All Men Are Brothers, and Dream of the Red Chamber, she concluded that in China "the novelist did not have the task of creating art but of speaking to the people." Her own ambition, she continued, had not been trained toward "the beauty of letters or the grace of art." In China, the task of the novelist differed from the Western artist: "To farmers he must talk of their land, and to old men he must speak of peace, and to old women he must tell of their children, and to young men and women he must speak of each other." And like the Chinese novelist, she concluded, "I have been taught to want to write for these people. If they are reading their magazines by the million, then I want my stories there rather than in magazines read only by a few."[16]

Humanitarian efforts and later life

Buck was highly committed to a range of issues that were largely ignored by her generation. Many of her life experiences and political views are described in her novels, short stories, fiction, children's stories, and the biographies of her parents entitled Fighting Angel (on Absalom) and The Exile (on Carrie). She wrote on a diverse variety of topics including women's rights, Asian cultures, immigration, adoption, missionary work, war and violence.

In 1949, outraged that existing adoption services considered Asian and mixed-race children unadoptable, Buck co-founded Welcome House, Inc.,[17] the first international, interracial adoption agency, along with James A. Michener, Oscar Hammerstein II and his second wife Dorothy Hammerstein. In nearly five decades of work, Welcome House has placed over five thousand children. In 1964, to support kids who were not eligible for adoption, Buck established the Pearl S. Buck Foundation (now called Pearl S. Buck International) to "address poverty and discrimination faced by children in Asian countries". In 1964, she opened the Opportunity Center and Orphanage in South Korea, and later offices were opened in Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam. When establishing Opportunity House, Buck said, "The purpose...is to publicize and eliminate injustices and prejudices suffered by children, who, because of their birth, are not permitted to enjoy the educational, social, economic and civil privileges normally accorded to children."[18]

In 1960, after a long decline in health, her husband, Richard, died. She renewed a warm relation with William Ernest Hocking, who died in 1963. Buck then withdrew from many of her old friends and quarreled with others. In the late 1960s, Buck toured West Virginia to raise money to preserve her family farm in Hillsboro, West Virginia. Today The Pearl S. Buck Birthplace is a historic house museum and cultural center.[19] She hoped the house would "belong to everyone who cares to go there", and serve as a "gateway to new thoughts and dreams and ways of life".[20]

Long before it was considered fashionable or politically safe to do so, Buck challenged the American public by raising consciousness on topics such as racism, sex discrimination and the plight of the thousands of babies born to Asian women left behind and unwanted wherever American soldiers were based in Asia. During her life Buck combined the multiple careers of wife, mother, author, editor and political activist.[21]

Theodore Harris

In the mid 1960s, Buck increasingly came under the influence of Theodore Harris, a former dance instructor, who became her confidant; she had met him in 1963, when he was working for the Arthur Murray dance studios. She soon depended on him for all her daily routines, and placed him in control of Welcome House and the Pearl S. Buck Foundation. Harris, who was given a lifetime salary as head of the Foundation, created a scandal for mismanaging the Foundation and for making Buck dependent on him. There were also allegations that he behaved in an insulting manner to staff, and that he was a homosexual who had abused Korean boys in his care.[22] Buck separated herself even from Welcome House after 20 years of dedication[23] and stuck by Harris, insisting that he was "very brilliant, very high strung and artistic".[22] She said the sexual allegations were "A bunch of downright lies".[24]

Buck defended Harris to the end of her life. According to her biographer Nora B. Stirling, she "seems to have hypnotised herself, to have actually believed that the whole unfortunate affair was nothing more than a hate campaign against Harris and herself."[25] Before her death Buck signed over her foreign royalties and her personal possessions to Creativity Inc., a foundation controlled by Harris.[26]

Death

Buck died on March 6, 1973. After her death, Buck's will leaving most of her jewelry to Harris was overturned by the courts.[27]

Legacy

Pearl S. Buck is receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature from King Gustav V of Sweden in the Stockholm Concert Hall in 1938.

Many contemporary reviewers were positive, and praised her "beautiful prose", even though her "style is apt to degenerate into over-repetition and confusion".[28] Robert Benchley wrote a parody of The Good Earth that focused on just these qualities. Peter Conn, in his biography of Buck, argues that despite the accolades awarded to her, Buck's contribution to literature has been mostly forgotten or deliberately ignored by America's cultural gatekeepers.[29] Kang Liao argues that Buck played a "pioneering role in demythologizing China and the Chinese people in the American mind".[30] Phyllis Bentley, in an overview of Buck's work published in 1935, was altogether impressed: "But we may say at least that for the interest of her chosen material, the sustained high level of her technical skill, and the frequent universality of her conceptions, Mrs. Buck is entitled to take rank as a considerable artist. To read her novels is to gain not merely knowledge of China but wisdom about life."[31] These works aroused considerable popular sympathy for China, and helped foment poor relations with Japan.[32]

Anchee Min, author of a fictionalized life of Pearl Buck, broke down upon reading Buck's work, because she had portrayed the Chinese peasants "with such love, affection and humanity".[33]

Buck was honored in 1983 with a 5¢ Great Americans series postage stamp issued by the United States Postal Service[34] In 1999 she was designated a Women's History Month Honoree by the National Women's History Project.[35]

Buck's former residence at Nanjing University (赛珍珠故居) is now the Sai Zhenzhu Memorial House along the West Wall of the university's north campus. U.S. President George H. W. Bush toured the Pearl S. Buck House in October 1998. He expressed that he, like millions of other Americans, had gained an appreciation for the Chinese through Buck's writing.[36]

Selected bibliography

Autobiographies

Biographies

Pearl Buck

Novels

Non-fiction

Long and short stories

Awards

Museums and historic houses

Pearl S Buck's study in Lushan Pearl S Buck Villa

Several historic sites work to preserve and display artifacts from Pearl's profoundly multicultural life:

See also

Notes

  1. The Nobel Prize in Literature 1938 Accessed 9 Mar 2013
  2. Lian Xi, The Conversion of Missionaries, University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 1996) 102 ISBN 0271064382.
  3. Shavit, David (1990), The United States in Asia: a historical dictionary, Greenwood Publishing Group, p. 480, ISBN 0-313-26788-X (Entry for "Sydenstricker, Absalom")
  4. King, Willford I. (June 1936). "Edgar Sydenstricker". Journal of the American Statistical Association 31 (194): 411–4. doi:10.1080/01621459.1936.10503344. JSTOR 2278574.
  5. Pearl S. Buck, My Several Worlds: A Personal Record (New York: John Day, 1954)p. 10.
  6. Peter Conn, Pearl S. Buck: A Cultural Biography, Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1996) 9, 19–23 ISBN 0521560802.
  7. 1 2 Conn, Pearl S. Buck, 70–82.
  8. Gould Hunter Thomas (1 January 2004). "Nanking". An American in China, 1936-1939: A Memoir. Greatrix Press. ISBN 978-0-9758800-0-5.
  9. 1 2 Conn, Pearl S. Buck, 345.
  10. Pearl S. Buck, "Is There a Case for Foreign Missions?," Harper's 166 (January 1933): 143-155.
  11. Buck, Pearl S. The Good Earth. Ed. Peter Conn. New York: Washington Square Press, 1994. Pp. xviii–xix.
  12. "Pearl Buck’s divorce". renodivorcehistory.org. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  13. "A Chinese Fan Of Pearl S. Buck Returns The Favor". NPR. April 7, 2010.
  14. Conn, Peter, Dragon and the Pearl
  15. Presentation Speech by Per Hallström Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy, December 10, 1938 Accessed 9 Mar 2013
  16. Nobel Lecture (1938) The Chinese Novel
  17. "Welcome House: A Historical Perspective". Pearl S. Buck International. Retrieved 2015-04-06.
  18. Pearl S. Buck International, "Our History," 2009.
  19. The Pearl S. Buck Birthplace Foundation
  20. Buck, Pearl S. My Mother's House. Richwood, WV: Appalachian Press. pp. 30–31.
  21. Conn, Pearl S. Buck, xv–xvi.
  22. 1 2 Sam G. Riley (ed.), Gary W. Selnow (ed.): Regional Interest Magazines of the United States. Greenwood Publishing Group, Westport (Connecticut), 1991, p. 259
  23. Conn. Pearl S. Buck. pp. 252, 362–367.
  24. "?". TIME 94 (1-13). p. 58.
  25. Stirling, Nora (1983). Pearl Buck: A Woman in Conflict. p. 308.
  26. "?". TIME 94 (1-13). p. 58.
  27. "Overturning of Buck Will Seen as a Product of Passion". Lewiston Daily Sun. August 10, 1974. p. 9.
  28. E.G. (1933). "Rev. of Sons". Pacific Affairs 6 (2/3): 112–15. doi:10.2307/2750834.
  29. Conn, Pearl S. Buck, xii–xiv.
  30. Liao, Kang (1997). Pearl S. Buck: a cultural bridge across the Pacific. Greenwood. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-313-30146-9.
  31. Bentley, Phyllis (1935). "The Art of Pearl S. Buck". The English Journal 24 (10): 791–800. JSTOR 804849.
  32. William L. O'Neill, A Democracy At War: America's Fight At Home and Abroad in World War II, p 57 ISBN 0-02-923678-9
  33. NPR, "A Chinese Fan Of Pearl S. Buck Returns The Favor", All Things Considered, April 7, 2010. Accessed 7/4/10
  34. Smithsonian National Postal Museum. "Great Americans Issue: 5-cent Buck". Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  35. "Honorees: 2010 National Women’s History Month". Women's History Month. National Women's History Project. 2010. Retrieved 14 November 2011.
  36. DDMap.com: 赛珍珠故居 (in Chinese), retrieved 2010-02-21
  37. "East Wind: West Wind by Pearl S Buck". Fantasticfiction. Retrieved 2015-04-06.
  38. Julie Bosman (21 May 2013). "A Pearl Buck Novel, New After 4 Decades". New York Times.
  39. "Pearl S. Buck International: Other Pearl S. Buck Historic Places". Psbi.org. 2006-09-30. Retrieved 2010-02-25.

Further reading

External links

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Pearl S. Buck at Find a Grave

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