AGE: 20
DATE OF PERFORMANCE: 04/01/2025
LANGUAGE: English
NATIONALITY: Taiwanese-American
OCCUPATION: Student
PRIMARY LANGUAGE: English
RESIDENCE: San Jose, CA
Interviewer: Are there any distinct folktales or myths that you grew up hearing about?
MS: “One was about this lady on the moon, and another was the story of Chinese New Year and the reasons for the different traditions.”
Interviewer: Can you expand a little bit more on the second story?
MS: “I was told that there was this dragon that would come and haunt this village. And every year the people of the town would evacuate the village, until one year this grandma was too old to walk up the mountain and evacuate. So she lit firecrackers and put red all over everyone’s door…to make it look like blood, I guess…and she successfully scared away the dragon. And when everyone came back down, they noticed she was still alive, and so that’s where the tradition began.”
PERSONAL INTERPRETATION:
I think it’s safe to say that most people in America (and definitely countries where Lunar New Year is celebrated) know what Chinese New Year is and the typical decorations and celebrations that take place. And even though every year growing up I had attended my high school’s Chinese New Year festival, I never really quite knew why everything was the way that it was. It’s incredibly interesting to learn where certain traditions, especially one as big as this, come from. I would love to hear a little bit more about this said dragon and maybe dive deeper into this tradition’s history, but this explanation shows (to me at least) that there were definitely real fears that occurred back then, that via word of mouth, traveled and transformed into what this tradition is today.