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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Zhao_Wei_8.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Zhao Wei as Yao Mulan in the 2005 TV adaptation.]]
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4''Moment In Peking'' is a novel written by Lin Yutang, and published in 1939. Because it was aimed at the Western readership, it was written directly in English, but it was later translated in Chinese under the title "京华烟云" (''Jinghua Yanyun''). It has been [[LiveActionAdaptation adapted]] into TV series in China on three occasions; the 2005 version features Creator/ZhaoWei as the main character.
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6The story follows the life of an extended upper-class Beijing family from the time of the Boxer uprising in 1900 to the beginning of the UsefulNotes/SecondSinoJapaneseWar in 1937. It is both a depiction of the daily life of a Chinese family, and a chronicle of the political and social changes sweeping China during that period.
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8The main character is Yao Mulan, who is introduced as a little girl, and becomes a middle-aged woman by the end of the novel.
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10----
11!!Contains examples of:
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13* ActorAllusion: Creator/ZhaoWei would later play Hua Mulan, who her character in this series is named after, in the live-action movie ''Film/MulanRiseOfAWarrior''.
14* AnachronismStew: In the LiveActionAdaptation, male characters wear modern hairstyles even before the fall of the Qing Dynasty, a time when men were required to wear their hair in the customary pigtail on pain of summary execution.
15* ArmiesAreEvil: The good characters repeatedly find themselves on the receiving end of military violence: from the corrupt warlords in the 1920s, and from the invading Japanese in the 1930s.
16* ArrangedMarriage: Nearly every marriage that takes place in the story is arranged by the respective spouses' families. TruthInTelevision insofar as it was indeed the norm in Chinese society at the time.
17* BittersweetEnding: The novel ends as the surviving characters join the exodus of refugees fleeing the advancing Japanese invaders. Yet, the author chooses not to present this as a DownerEnding, since the war was still being fought as he wrote the book.
18* ButNowIMustGo: Mulan's father leaves his family to become a [[JourneyToFindOneself Taoist hermit]]. He doesn't come back until years later.
19* LesCollaborateurs: Niu Huayu joins the invading Japanese. Also, Suyun before her aforementioned HeelFaceTurn.
20* EccentricMentor: Mulan's father is a somewhat eccentric practioner of Taoism, and encourages his daughter's intellectual curiosity.
21* GenerationalSaga
22* TheGloriousWarOfSisterlyRivalry: Mulan and Mochou.
23* HeelFaceTurn: Niu Suyun sides with the Japanese out of self-interest, but eventually changes sides.
24* IWantMyBelovedToBehappy: Mulan's attitude towards Kong Lifu, her true love, who instead marries her sister.
25* MeaningfulName: The main character is named after ''the'' WesternAnimation/{{Mulan}}, to emphasize her personal bravery and independent spirit.
26* MultigenerationalHousehold: In a traditional Beijing ''siheyuan'' (四合院 = courtyard house).
27* {{Ojou}}: Mulan is the embodiment of ''noblesse oblige'', a genuinely kind and considerate upper-class girl (and later lady).
28* RedemptionEqualsDeath: Suyun.
29* TakingYouWithMe: In the 2005 TV adaptation, Mulan's father lures a squad of Japanese soldiers and a pro-Japanese [[LesCollaborateurs collaborator]] in his cellar, and sets it on fire with everyone, including himself, locked inside.
30* UpperClassTwit: Zeng Sunya, Mulan's husband. He does improve as he matures.

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