草泥马叔叔
Chinese playwright and author of humorous, satiric novels and short stories. Lao She is perhaps best known for his story LO-T'O HSIANG-TZU (1936, Rickshaw), a twentieth-century classic. An unauthorized and bowdlerized English translation, Rickshaw Boy, with a happy ending, appeared in 1945 and became a U.S. bestseller. "The person we want to introduce is Hsing Tzu, not Camel Hsiang Tzu, because "Camel is only a nickname. We'll just say Hsiang Tzu for now, having indicated that there is a connection between Camel and Hsiang Tzu." (from Rickshaw) Shu Quingchun (Lao She) was born Shu She-yü of Manchu descent in Beijing. His father, who was a guard soldier, died in a street battle during the 1900 Boxer uprising. To support her family and Lao Shê's private tutoring, his mother did laundry. "During my childhood," Lao She has later said, "I didn't need to hear stories about evil ogres eating children and so forth; the foreign devils my mother told me about were more barbaric and cruel than any fairy tale ogre with a huge mouth and great fangs. And fairy tales are only fairy tales, whereas my mother's stories were 100 percent factual, and they directly affected our whole family." (Lao Shê in Modern Chinese Writers, ed. by Helmut Martin and Jeffrey Kinkley, 1992) Fatherless since early childhood, Lao She worked his way through Peking Teacher's College. After graduation he supported himself and his mother through a series of teaching and administrative posts. He served as a principal of an elementary school at the age of 17, and later he was a district supervisor. Lao She spent the years from 1924 to 1929 in London, where he taught Chinese at the School of Oriental and African Studies. By reading amongst other things the novels of Charles Dickens, Lao She improved his English, and decided to start his first novel. In 1930 Lao She returned to China and continued to write and teach Chinese at Qilu and Shadong Universities. MAO CH'ENG CHI (1933, Cat Country) was a bitter satire about Chinese society. In NIU T'IEN-TZ'U CHUAN (1934, Heavensent), partly modelled on Fielding's Tom Jones, Lao She turned again to humor. He reversed his early individualist theme and stressed the futility of the individual's struggle against society as a whole. In Rickshaw Boy Lao She traces the degradation and ruin of an industrious Peking rickshaw puller, a peasant drawn to the city. To earn his living, he pulls a rented rickshaw from dawn till dark, enjoys briefly the status of owner-operator, and finally dies on a snowy night. Evan King's translation published in 1945 invented new characters and changed the ending.
悦悦哥哥
Lao she, formerly ShuQingChun, modern famous writer, novelist and playwright, astronomers. Because of various works and the title of "people". His works are of readers. Once RenXiaoXue principals, middle school teacher, university professors, etc.
豆哥豆爷
Lao she was born on February 3, 1899August 23, 1966 Lao she diedLao she was born in Beijing xicheng small fold alleyLao she is a writer
whahappy502
Lao She, formerly known as Shu Qingchun, modern well-known writer, novelist, writer, dramatist. A result of numerous works won the "People's Artist" title. His works are well received by the reader's affection. A former primary school, secondary school teachers, university professors, etc. 肯定对
屠夫糖糖
Chinese playwright and author of humorous, satiric novels and short stories. Lao She is perhaps best known for his story LO-T'O HSIANG-TZU (1936, Rickshaw), a twentieth-century classic. An unauthorized and bowdlerized English translation, Rickshaw Boy, with a happy ending, appeared in 1945 and became a U.S. bestseller. "The person we want to introduce is Hsing Tzu, not Camel Hsiang Tzu, because "Camel is only a nickname. We'll just say Hsiang Tzu for now, having indicated that there is a connection between Camel and Hsiang Tzu." (from Rickshaw) Shu Quingchun (Lao She) was born Shu She-yü of Manchu descent in Beijing. His father, who was a guard soldier, died in a street battle during the 1900 Boxer uprising. To support her family and Lao Shê's private tutoring, his mother did laundry. "During my childhood," Lao She has later said, "I didn't need to hear stories about evil ogres eating children and so forth; the foreign devils my mother told me about were more barbaric and cruel than any fairy tale ogre with a huge mouth and great fangs. And fairy tales are only fairy tales, whereas my mother's stories were 100 percent factual, and they directly affected our whole family." (Lao Shê in Modern Chinese Writers, ed. by Helmut Martin and Jeffrey Kinkley, 1992)
了无痕Sky
Lao She, formerly known as Shu Qingchun, modern well-known writer, novelist, writer, dramatist. A result of numerous works won the "People's Artist" title. His works are well received by the reader's affection. A former primary school, secondary school teachers, university professors, etc.
牛奶荡糕
老舍一生写了约计800余万字的作品。主要著作有:长篇小说《二马》、《猫城记》、《骆驼祥子》、《四世同堂》,中篇小说《月牙儿》,《我这一辈子》,短篇小说集《赶集》、《樱海集》,《蛤藻集》、《火车集》、《贫血集》,剧本《龙须沟》、《茶馆》,另有《老舍剧作全集》,《老舍散文集》、《老舍诗选》、《老舍文艺评论集》和《老舍文集》等。老舍以长篇小说和剧作著称于世。他的作品大都取材于市民生活,为中国现代文学开拓了重要的题材领域。Lao She wrote a life of approximately 800 million words of the works. His major works include: full-length novel, "Ma II" and "Cat City", "Rickshaw Boy" and "four generations," novella "Crescent Moon" and "my whole life," a short story collection "fair" and " Ying-Hai "and" clam-algae "and" train "and" anemic "and the script of" Long Xugou "and" Tea House ", and" The Complete Works of Lao She plays "," Lao She's essays, "" Lao She's Selected Poems "," Lao She Literary Comments Set "and" Collected Works of Lao She. " Lao She's novels and plays in the world, said. Most of his works based on the public life of modern Chinese literature to open up an important theme in the field.