BEIJING, Jan. 9 -- Handsome boys and pretty girls
regularly fall in love, hang out at bars and clubs and swindle money from their
families. Some even get married once they hit the age of 18.
Such are the adventures of the young people who
populate the stories of many magazines popular with middle school students in
Beijing. And some parents are not happy about it.
The Beijing Morning Post recently printed a story
about an anxious mother who had called up the newspaper to complain about how
popular love story magazines had become among students.
The mother said these magazines regularly featured
stories about handsome boys and pretty girls from rich families living luxurious
and romantic lives, their days dominated by play and fun.
The girls talk dirty and even fight, while the boys
visit bars and dance halls. Their classmates are suspicious and envious, and
betrayals in matters of love are common.
The last straw for the anguished mother was that the
magazines also feature pictures of intimate physical contact, which the mother
considered "too much for middle school students."
Of course, few students have had problems with the
magazines, according to a salesperson at one newsstand in Beijing. "They sell
well and are often on the bestseller list," said the salesperson.
According to Yang Shu, a grade-one student at the
middle school affiliated with Peking University, the magazines are popular
because they present situations that are much different from those experienced
by most middle school students.
"Compared with our lives of endless homework and
discipline from both our families and schools, the boys and girls in the stories
are just so free and live carefree and funny lives," said Yang, a devoted fan of
love magazines.
But Yang added that she was not interested in living
the kind of life described in the stories, stressing that "a story is just a
story, and they are only meant to spice up the lives of bored students."
Zhang Yongqi, the principle of Beijing's No. 12 high
school, said parents and schools should be less nervous about their children's
adolescent emotional needs.
Zhang said parents should instead guide their
children's interests towards reading in formal reading environments, such as
libraries. "Just a little more care can make a big difference," said Zhang.
(Source: China Daily)