exotic east

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    If you dig deep enough, you will get to China. This saying has several implica-

    tions. One being the literal sense in which a group of people are actually blindly digging

    straight down into the Earth and possibly ending up on the other side. But the more figu-

    rative and more dramatic sense is the mystery of what is on the other side. Not literally

    digging, but delving into the knowledge of the eastern culture. Just as China is seen to

    be the other side of the world from The United States, the cultures correlate to be polar

    opposites in the minds of many people. This opposite intrigues many people and push-

    es a concept of the Eastern culture as being this mysterious, exotic, unknown culture

    needed to be explored. David Henry Hwang inquires his audiences with the question of

    What exactly is behind the desire to see the exotic East? (DiGaetani 141). In Hwangs

    M. Butterflythe impulse behind the desire to see the exotic East is the need for mys-

    tery, and the need for a cultural opposite.

    Even as far back as Jesus rising from the dead, people have always loved a good

    mystery. Throughout M. Butterfly there is a continued desire to pursue a mystery, thus

    beginning the excavation into the Eastern culture. Hwang tell us that Gallimard was not

    very good-looking...not handsome, nor brave, nor powerful (Hwang 994, 996), so when

    Song interacts with Gallimard for the first time he is shocked. Hwang even wrights it into

    the stage direction. Hwang, in DiGaetanis interview, comments on the mystery, referring

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    to Edward Saids term of orientalism. He describes it as the East being mysterious

    [and] inscrutable (DiGaetani 142). Gallimard unconsciously jumps into the mystery and

    further pursues a conversation and ultimately a relationship with an Oriental. Hwang

    further extenuates Gallimards obsession with the mystery by having him discuss it with

    his wife directly afterwards. In that scene it is almost as if he is investigating by bouncing

    his opinions off the sounding board that is his wife. He wonders about how she, must

    have been educated in the West (Hwang 1000), in order for her to have been able to

    speak Italian. In his pursuit of the answers to his mystery his is showing the attitude of

    condescension toward the East (DeGaetani 142) that Hwang comments on in his inter-

    view. Gallimards need for mystery finally pushes him to see the Chinese opera and,

    more importantly, see Song again.

    The narration is a gateway into Gallimards conscience. The audience can see

    Songs comment of the fascination with the other culture being also mutual (Hwang

    1001) bouncing around in his mind. Gallimard has to cling to this fantasy of Song being

    interested in him and even tries to sort out the mystery of this fantasy in his dreams with

    Marc. In his interview Hwang says that such a fundamental component of the relation-

    ship is the fantasy (DeGaetani 146), telling the audience that both Song and Gallimard

    must cling to this fantasy in order for the relationship to grow. Gallimard lives to answer

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    the question of the mystery and to quench the desert of his fantasy. He returns to the

    opera that next week, and the week after that and he is left each week with a thirst that

    is intensified (Hwang 1003). His longing to find the answer to this mystery is digging

    him further down into the hole towards exotic East.

    Opposites being attracted to one another is a basic law in life. Most of the world

    sees China, or the Orient, as this ancient civilization surrounded by rice paddies and

    bamboo chutes, but if you got their opinion on any Western civilization they would think

    skyscrapers and concrete jungles. Along with the aforementioned mystery comes a

    need to explore the opposite, or to continue this drilling into the Earth. When Gallimard

    first sees Song she sang in Italian and he even notes that her French is very good

    (Hwang 1000). He is getting more of the same and if that need for the other was not

    there he would have not gone to the Chinese opera. Hwang also shows the audience

    Gallimards discomfort with the Western woman or the same with the Dutch student.

    Gallimard tells the audience that she was too willing so as to seem almost too...mascu-

    line (Hwang 1012), creating an irony the story. Hwang comments on this irony in his in-

    terview when he tells DeGaetani that you have a real woman who acts masculine, and

    a man who acts feminine (DeGaetani 148). Gallimard does not want more of the

    same. Hwang stated that the purpose of the Dutch student was to show the difference

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    in what perceive to be the Western woman...and the Eastern woman (DeGaetani 148).

    Of course in the story Gallimard leans toward the Eastern woman, the other rather

    than more of the same of his accustomed Western women.

    While digging a hole to China there is this continued wonder of what exactly lies

    on the other side. This wonder causes one to keep digging and as the goal becomes

    closer and more visible the digging becomes more rapid and fierce, so is the story of

    Gallimard and the Western culture. The concept of the exotic East captures attention

    and the continued mystery is the motivation to keep searching for the answers to all the

    questions that form in the process of discovering the other. Hwang in both the play and

    the interview illustrate this notion of the search for the East with the strong affinity to the

    opposite culture. not only with Gallimard, but even his wife says that in China, [she] was

    happy (Hwang 1019). It is the discovery of the mystery that cause people to seek for the

    exotic East