Lu Xun's life
Lu Xun (188 1- 1936) was born in Shaoxing, Zhejiang. China is a great modern writer, thinker and revolutionary. Lu Xun was originally named Zhou Shuren, Zhang Shou and Cai Yu. "Lu Xun" is the pseudonym he used after taking part in the May 4th Movement. Because of its growing influence, people used to call it Lu Xun.
Lu Xun was born in Fangkou, Duchang, Shaoxing on September 25th, 1982. Enlightened at the age of 7, 12 years old went to study in Santan Yinyue. He is studious, knowledgeable and good at remembering. He likes reading unofficial history's notes and folk literature books after school. He became interested in painting art and laid a solid cultural foundation. He is not confined to the four books and five classics, but tries to find extracurricular reading materials and master historical and cultural knowledge. Shaoxing's long history and splendid culture, especially the moral articles of many Vietnamese and China sages, have greatly influenced and played a role in Lu Xun's thought. When Lu Xun was a teenager, his grandfather was imprisoned for the imperial examination case, his father died, and his family wealth plummeted from then on. Lu Xun changed from the eldest son of a feudal scholar-bureaucrat family to a ruined child. The family suffered a series of major changes, which made the young Lu Xun suffer from the cold and warm world, saw the true face of the "cold world" and realized the decay and decline of feudal society. Lu Rui, Lu Xun's mother, is the daughter of a farmer. She has a noble character and has a great influence on Lu Xun.
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193610 June19, Lu Xun died at the age of 55 in his apartment in Shanghai Xincun.
Lu Xun wrote a poem "Self-mockery", in which two lines are "looking at a thousand fingers coldly and bowing down as a willing ox", which is a true portrayal of his life.
Lu Xun's works
Shout (collection of short stories) 1923, new issue.
A Brief History of Chinese Novels (Volume I) 1923- 1924, Xinchao Society.
Hot air (essay) 1925, Beixin
Wandering (short story collection) 1926, Beixin
Gai Hua Ji (Essay) 1926, Beixin
Gai Hua's Chronicle (Essay) 1927, Beixin.
Grave (paper, essay) 1927, unnamed society.
Weeds (Selected Prose Poems) t927. Beixin
Flowers in the morning and flowers in the evening (essays) 1928, unknown society.
Gangji (Essay) 1928, Beixin
San Xian Ji (Essay) 1932, Beixin
Two Hearts (Prose Collection) 1932, He Zhong Bookstore.
Selected Works of Lu Xun 1933, Tianma
Book of Two Places (Collection of Letters) co-authored with Matsui, 1933, Guangqing Bookstore.
Pseudo-Free Books (Essay) 1933, Guangqing Bookstore.
Selected Works of Lu Xun's Miscellaneous Feelings, edited by Zhai Qiubai, 1933, Guangqing Bookstore.
Southern accent and northern assembly (anthology) 1934, wentong publishing house.
1934, the collection of He Zhong Bookstore.
Zhuntan (essay) 1934, Bookstore.
Outside the collection, edited by Yang Jiyun, revised by Lu Xun, 1935, People's Book Company.
About Foreign Languages (Thesis) 1935, Tianma
New stories (novel collection) 1936, Vincent.
Lace Literature (Essay) 1936, Lotus Bookstore.
Chejiege Essay (Essay) 1936, Sanxian Bookstore.
Night Notes (essays, later edited as the end of Qi Jieting's Essays) 1937, Vincent.
Two Essays on the Pavilion of Anta (Essays) 1937, Sanxian Bookstore.
At the end, the essay (essay) 1937, Sanxian Bookstore.
Lu Xun's Letters (photocopy) edited by Xu Guangping, 1937, Sanxian Bookstore.
Complete Works of Lu Xun (1-20 volumes, including works, translations and ancient books) 1938, Complete Works of Lu Xun Publishing House.
Extracorpora (comprehensive collection) 1938, Lu Xun Complete Works Publishing House.
Outline of China Literature History (Literature History) 194 1, Complete Works of Lu Xun Publishing House.
Supplement to Complete Works of Lu Xun, edited by Tang Tao, 1946, Shanghai Publishing Company.
Lu Xun's Letters, edited by Xu Guangping, 1946, Complete Works of Lu Xun Publishing House.
Lu Xun's Diary (photocopy) 195 1, Shanghai Publishing Company; Print, 1959, Humanities
Selected Works of Lu Xun 1952, Enlightened.
Lu Xun's Novels 1952, Humanities
Supplement to Complete Works of Lu Xun, edited by Tang Tao, 1952, Shanghai Publishing Company.
Wu Yuankan's Supplement to Lu Xun's Letters, 1952, Shanghai Publishing Company.
Complete Works of Lu Xun (Volume1-LO)1956-1958, Humanities
Selected works of Lu Xun. (Volume 1-2) 1956- 1958, Zhongqing
Historical changes of China's novels (literary history) 1958, Sanlian.
Selected Works of Lu Xun (Volume I) 1959, Humanities
Letters from Lu Xun (to Japanese friend Masuda) 1972, People's Daily.
Poems of Lu Xun 1976, cultural relics; 198 1, Shanghai People's Fine Arts Publishing House
Lu Xun's collection of letters (one volume and two volumes 138 1 letters except two places) 1976, humanities.
Lu Xun's lost article 1976, Liberation Army Daily.
Lu Xun's Letters (to Cao Jinghua) 1976, Shanghainese.
Manuscripts of complete works of Lu Xun (8 letters and 6 diaries) 1978- 1980, cultural relics.
Lu Xun's letter to Xu Guangping 1980, from Hebei.
Complete Works of Lu Xun (Volume1-16)1981,Humanities
The Complete Works of Lu Xun Volume I (Hot air shouting at the grave)
The Complete Works of Lu Xun Volume II (New Story of Wandering Weeds Picking Flowers Late)
The Complete Works of Lu Xun Volume 3 (Gai Hua Ji Gai Hua Ji is a sequel)
The Complete Works of Lu Xun Volume 4 (Three Idles and Two Hearts Set North and South)
The Complete Works of Lu Xun Volume 5 (Pseudo-Free Books and Quasi-Romantic Talks on Lace Literature)
The Complete Works of Lu Xun, Volume VI (Also on Introduction to Pavilion Essays, Pavilion Essays II and Pavilion Essays Final Draft)
The Complete Works of Lu Xun Volume 7 (Excerpts from various episodes)
The Complete Works of Lu Xun Volume 8 (Supplement)