Liu Xinwu

Liu Xinwu
b. 1942, Chengdu
Writer
A pioneer of Scar literature, Liu Xinwu is known for his preoccupation with social criticism, particularly the legacies of Mao. He was a middle school teacher for fifteen years in Beijing before he gained overnight fame with the publication of ‘The Class Teacher’ (Banzhuren, 1977). It was the first story to expose the failure of education during the Cultural Revolution as embodied in the hooligan Song Baoqi and the dogmatic Xie Huimin. ‘Save the children’ is the key theme. In a succession of stories from 1978 to 1980, Liu called for: the return of love in The Place of Love’ (Aiqing de weizhi); individuality in ‘Every Leaf’ (Mei yipian luoye); faith in ‘Wake up, Brother!’ (Xinglai ba, didi); and freedom of choice in ‘Black Walls’ (Heiqiang). His novella A Gift (Ruyi), which reveals the damage done to human relations by class struggle through the humane behaviour of an honest servant, is a probing study of human nature which moves beyond political protest.
Liu’s stories on urban problems are more successful. His novella The Overpass (Liti jiaochaqiao) vividly depicts psychological suppression in an unbearably crowded environment. His novel, The Bell Drum Tower (Zhong gu lou), which won the Mao Dun Literary Prize, shows the multifaceted life of ordinary Beijing people, who live in an old-style compound. The novel, The Wind Blows Past (Feng Guo’er) satirizes the philistinism of literary circles through a rivalry over the possession of a manuscript left by a supposedly deceased writer in a plane crash.
See also: Cultural Revolution (education)
LEUNG LAIFONG

Encyclopedia of contemporary Chinese culture. . 2011.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Liu Xinwu — (Chinese: 刘心武, Liú Xīnwǔ ; b. 1942) is a Chinese author, and one of the earliest proponents of the post Maoist wave of Chinese literature. BiographyBorn in the province of Sichuan, his family moved to Beijing, a city that figures prominently in… …   Wikipedia

  • Liu Xinwu —   [ ɕinwu], Liu Hsin wu, chinesischer Schriftsteller, * Chengdu 4. 6. 1942. Seine Kurzgeschichte »Der Klassenlehrer« (1977; chinesisch), die erstmals jugendliches Rowdytum schilderte, leitete den Neubeginn einer realistischen Literatur in China… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Liu Hsin-wu —   [ ɕin ], chinesischer Schriftsteller, Liu Xinwu …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Chinesische Schriftsteller — Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Chronologische Liste 1.1 Altertum, Qin, Han, Dynastien vor der Tang Zeit 1.2 Tang Dynastie und folgende 1.3 Song Dynastie und folgende 1.4 Ming Dynastie …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chinesischer Autor — Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Chronologische Liste 1.1 Altertum, Qin, Han, Dynastien vor der Tang Zeit 1.2 Tang Dynastie und folgende 1.3 Song Dynastie und folgende 1.4 Ming Dynastie …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chinesischer Schriftsteller — Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Chronologische Liste 1.1 Altertum, Qin, Han, Dynastien vor der Tang Zeit 1.2 Tang Dynastie und folgende 1.3 Song Dynastie und folgende 1.4 Ming Dynastie …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Liste chinesischer Schriftsteller — Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Chronologische Liste 1.1 Altertum, Qin, Han, Dynastien vor der Tang Zeit 1.2 Tang Dynastie und folgende 1.3 Song Dynastie und folgende …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Cheng-Gao versions — In the study of the classic Chinese novel Dream of the Red Chamber, the Cheng Gao versions or Cheng Gao editions (程高本) refer to two illustrated, woodblock print editions of the book published in 1791 and 1792. The 1791 version, produced at the… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Chinese writers — Contents 1 Chronological list 1.1 Antiquity and Qin Dynasty 1.2 Han Dynasty and following 1.3 Tang Dynasty and following …   Wikipedia

  • Cultural Revolution — This article is about the People s Republic of China. For Iran s Islamic Cultural Revolution, see Iranian Cultural Revolution. Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution Cultural Revolution propaganda poster. It depicts Mao Zedong, above a group of… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”