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251+ oeuvres 2,115 utilisateurs 30 critiques 7 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

A writer, essayist, translator, poet, and literary theorist and critic, Lu Hsun was born in the Chekiang Province of an educated family whose fortunes were in decline. He went to Japan to study Western medicine, but he dropped out of Sendai Medical College in 1906 after seeing news slides of afficher plus Japanese soldiers decapitating Chinese in Manchuria. He made a decision to cure the "souls" of his countrymen rather than their bodies and chose literature as his medium. Lu Hsun returned to China in 1909 and watched the progress of the 1911 revolution with dismay. His spirits were raised somewhat in 1917 when the magazine New Youth raised the banner of literary revolution. He joined the ranks of the new writers with his short story "Diary of a Madman." Several more stories soon followed, the most famous of which was "The True Story of Ah Q" in the early 1920's. In 1926, after one of many periodic bouts of depression, Lu Hsun traveled for a while in the south and then settled in Shanghai, where he was greeted as a doyen on the literary scene. However, although many young writers wanted to become his disciples, he had an ambivalent attitude toward them and often became bitter or angry when he disagreed with their theories. The League of Left-Wing Writers was founded in 1930 and promptly took him as their leader. But from the beginning, relations were quite strained, and, by the time he died in 1936, he was completely alienated from these men who would later sing his praises. The extent of Lu Hsun's work and his high standards laid the foundation for modern Chinese literature, and he is still considered to be China's greatest twentieth-century writer in the People's Republic. His stories are satiric, unflinchingly realistic, disturbing, and brilliantly crafted in tone and style. In addition to this rich legacy, he also translated a number of European works of literature and theoretical studies on art and literature into Chinese, and he helped to introduce modern art to China. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Séries

Œuvres de Lu Xun

Histoire d'AQ: véridique biographie (1921) 210 exemplaires
La Mauvaise herbe (10-18) (1927) 86 exemplaires
Call To Arms (1923) 79 exemplaires
Contes anciens sur un mode nouveau (1936) 51 exemplaires
A Madman's Diary (1971) 50 exemplaires
Dawn Blossoms Plucked at Dusk (1928) 45 exemplaires
Brève histoire du roman chinois (1925) 40 exemplaires
Selected Works of Lu Xun [set] (1980) 39 exemplaires
Wandering (1926) 32 exemplaires
Jottings under Lamplight (2017) 15 exemplaires
Fuga sulla luna (1973) 13 exemplaires
The Complete Stories of Lu Xun (1981) 13 exemplaires
Verzameld werk (2000) 11 exemplaires
Das trunkene Land (1994) 9 exemplaires
Die große Mauer (1987) 7 exemplaires
Tempête dans une tasse de thé (1998) 7 exemplaires
Novelas escogidas de Lu Sin (1972) 6 exemplaires
La falsa libertà 5 exemplaires
Applaus : Erzählungen (1994) 5 exemplaires
狂人日記 (1991) 5 exemplaires
魯迅小說集 (1990) 4 exemplaires
A Lu Hsün Reader (1967) 3 exemplaires
Chinese Classic stories (1999) 3 exemplaires
Lu Xun Selected Essays (2006) 3 exemplaires
朝花夕拾 3 exemplaires
Letters Between Two (1933) 3 exemplaires
Novelas escogidas de Lu Sin (1972) 2 exemplaires
Errances (2004) 2 exemplaires
華蓋集續編 (1927) 2 exemplaires
准风月谈 (1934) 2 exemplaires
Lu xun san wen ji 魯迅散文集 (1995) 2 exemplaires
Esitazione (2022) 2 exemplaires
Essais choisis. Tome I (1976) 2 exemplaires
Lu Xun cang Han hua xiang (1991) 2 exemplaires
Cris (1995) 2 exemplaires
Poesie (2016) 2 exemplaires
Kinesiske historier (1999) 2 exemplaires
Poems of Lu Hsun (1979) 2 exemplaires
Pamphlets et libelles: 1925-1936 (1977) 2 exemplaires
而已集 (1928) 2 exemplaires
花边文学 (1936) 2 exemplaires
歷史故事新編 2 exemplaires
Lu Xun (hardcover) (1991) 2 exemplaires
唐宋传奇集全译 (2009) 2 exemplaires
Nouvelles choisies 2 exemplaires
吶喊 (1999) 2 exemplaires
Three Stories (1970) 2 exemplaires
伤逝 1 exemplaire
药 Medicine 1 exemplaire
Pagal Ki Diary 1 exemplaire
Dã Thảo 1 exemplaire
Selected Works volume 3 (1980) 1 exemplaire
Is-Sejha 1 exemplaire
Kong Yiji Y Otros Cuentos (2016) 1 exemplaire
魯迅散文合集 (2011) 1 exemplaire
魯迅詩箋選集 1 exemplaire
魯迅小說選 1 exemplaire
吶喊 1 exemplaire
阿Q正傳賞析 (2018) 1 exemplaire
唐宋傳奇記 1 exemplaire
魯迅金句漫畫 (1995) 1 exemplaire
唐宋傳奇集 1 exemplaire
CIGLIK 1 exemplaire
Short Stories 1 exemplaire
Professor Kao 1 exemplaire
Benediction 1 exemplaire
Elektitaj noveloj 1 exemplaire
TREGIME 1 exemplaire
Benopeta Ofero 1 exemplaire
魯迅精品集 2: 徬徨 (2010) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集 (第4巻) (1964) 1 exemplaire
Acentos mixtos 1 exemplaire
阿Q正伝 (角川文庫) (1961) 1 exemplaire
阿Q正傳 1 exemplaire
大 囯学. 鲁迅 (2008) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集 (第1巻) (1964) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集 (第2巻) (1964) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集 (第3巻) (1964) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集 (第5巻) (1964) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集. 第6 (1964) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集 (第7巻) (1964) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集 (第9巻) (1964) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集 (第10巻) (1964) 1 exemplaire
魯迅選集 (第8巻) (1964) 1 exemplaire
魯迅の言葉 (2011) 1 exemplaire
狂人日記: 野草 1 exemplaire
魯迅精品集 5: 故事新編 (1970) 1 exemplaire
Chinese Literature 1 exemplaire
集外集 (1935) 1 exemplaire
6 volumes of Lu Xun 1 exemplaire
Do Amar Kahaniyan 1 exemplaire
La vera storia di Ah Q (2013) 1 exemplaire
Selected Works 1 exemplaire
Luxun Pamphlets & libelles (1977) 1 exemplaire
Grida (Italian Edition) (2021) 1 exemplaire
Lu Xun xiao shuo xuan ji (1996) 1 exemplaire
Nouvelles choisies 1 exemplaire
Werke in sechs B©Þnden (1994) 1 exemplaire
Villiruohoa (2017) 1 exemplaire
Silent China 1 exemplaire
L'édifiante histoire d'a-Q (2015) 1 exemplaire
阿Q正传 (Chinese Edition) (2012) 1 exemplaire
鲁迅小说插图集 1 exemplaire
狂人日记/鲁迅作品 (2017) 1 exemplaire
鲁迅代表作 (2021) 1 exemplaire
Stories and Sketches 1 exemplaire
Berättelser 1 exemplaire
Einige Erzählungen. (1974) 1 exemplaire
KUNG I-CHI 1 exemplaire
Medicine 1 exemplaire
Lu Xun xiao shuo · Pang huang (1999) 1 exemplaire
且介亭杂文二集 (1937) 1 exemplaire
Lu Xun san wen. Zhao hua xi shi (1999) 1 exemplaire
Antiche storie riscritte (2024) 1 exemplaire
鲁迅小说集 (1990) 1 exemplaire
热风 (1925) 1 exemplaire
华盖集 (1926) 1 exemplaire
(1927) 1 exemplaire
且介亭杂文 (1937) 1 exemplaire
且介亭杂文末编 (1937) 1 exemplaire
野草(汉英对照) (2016) 1 exemplaire
集外集拾遗 1 exemplaire
集外集拾遗补编 1 exemplaire
汉文学史纲要 1 exemplaire
古籍序跋集 (2006) 1 exemplaire
译文序跋集 (2006) 1 exemplaire
三闲集 (1932) 1 exemplaire
南腔北调 (1934) 1 exemplaire
伪自由书 (1933) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

The Art of the Personal Essay (1994) — Contributeur — 1,382 exemplaires
The Story and Its Writer: An Introduction to Short Fiction (1983) — Contributeur — 1,134 exemplaires
World Poetry: An Anthology of Verse from Antiquity to Our Time (1998) — Contributeur — 449 exemplaires
A World of Great Stories (1947) 263 exemplaires
La forêt en feu (1983) — Auteur — 59 exemplaires
Le tatouage et autres récits (1980) — Contributeur — 39 exemplaires
Found in Translation (2018) — Contributeur, quelques éditions36 exemplaires
One World of Literature (1992) — Contributeur — 24 exemplaires
De dag dat je brief kwam Amnesty International poëziebundel (1988) — Contributeur — 18 exemplaires
The Uncanny Gastronomic: Strange Tales of the Edible Weird (2023) — Contributeur — 14 exemplaires

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Signalé
FILBO | Apr 30, 2024 |
Not sure how well these stories – mostly pretty depressing – are translated. I got the book because Leslie T. Chang referred to one of them, My Old Home, in an article for the New York Review in 2022. And then I saw Jeffrey Wasserstrom had puffed a translation by Julia Lovell which "could be considered the most significant Penguin Classic ever published."

So we have: “Hope, I thought to myself, is an intangible presence that can neither be affirmed nor denied – a path that exists only where others have already passed. January 1921" (from "The Real Story of Ah-Q and Other Tales of China: The Complete Fiction of Lu Xun (Penguin Classics)" by Lu Xun, translator Julia Lovell).
Chang translates the same passage infinitely better – she comments that ‘Lu Xun’s story has one of the most famous endings in modern Chinese literature:’ – “I thought: hope cannot be said to exist, nor can it be said not to exist. It is just like roads across the earth. For actually the earth had no roads to begin with, but when many men pass one way, a road is made.”
Then the second last ‘old story retold’, where the tired hero sat at the foot of a tree to rest his feet!

The Lovell introduction is good, however, with a useful chronology and references. The Kindle is not the greatest – when you tap a footnote it defines the number. The section on Lu Xun in Wasserstom’s book on modern Chinese history is also helpful.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
mnicol | 2 autres critiques | Mar 31, 2024 |
Short, punchy satirical depiction of revolutionary China
 
Signalé
CosmicMiddleChild | 4 autres critiques | May 12, 2023 |
Even strongly ideological authors know that in order to reach a popular audience, their political ideas have to be layered underneath palatable narratives and relatable characters. Great writers like Steinbeck or Zola did this well; the mark of hacks like Ayn Rand is their inability to let their messages flow smoothly from the story and to say what they mean without shouting at the reader. Lu Xun set himself a real challenge with his work here - short stories can be an even more difficult medium than novels to make political points, just because each story has to spend proportionately more time on character development and so forth. Not that it's impossible - Varlam Shalamov's short stories in Kolyma Tales are in a way far more effective at conveying the grim brutality of the gulag system than Solzhenitsyn's more famous works precisely because Shalamov's points seem to emerge from the stories far more organically - but often the author has to hope that it's the subtle shared connections between stories that make the difference rather than any single moment within an individual story, the overall themes emerging in the manner of the rhythm of the clacking wheels of a train on a long journey.

Lu's efforts succeed here in exactly that way, the cumulative effects growing stronger with each story. He wrote these stories in the 1910s and 20s as China was taking some halfhearted steps to awaken itself from its centuries-long torpor, and lurking in the background of just about every one of them are some consistent themes: the gargantuan ineptitude of government bureaucracy, the humiliating obsequiousness of the powerless towards the powerful, the pathetic poverty of village life, the absurdities of slavish devotion to Confucianism, the suffocating incuriosity of the Chinese people, and the necessity of radical changes at all levels of society if China were to ever start addressing them. I always respect authors who are willing to make bold criticisms of their own societies, because nothing is artistically easier or more temptingly lucrative than to simply give people what's familiar and flattering to their own prejudices. But these short stories, which are often very funny in their amused chronicling of universal human foibles, are incredibly uncomplimentary to basically every aspect of what at the time was a catatonic and stagnant culture, and Lu deserves real credit for his Nikolai Gogol-esque portraits that are instantly relatable even as they depict people at their worst and least likable.

The Penguin Classics edition I have groups three different short story collections together: Outcry, Hesitation, and Old Stories Retold, with the title story halfway through the first collection. Each tale has innumerable tiny details that make them feel much larger than their actual half-dozen-ish pages, odd names like "Seven-Pounds" and loving descriptions of dirt and filth giving the impression that the reader is peering in at a succession of tiny fishbowls, the characters stuck swimming in tiny circles like firmly oppressed goldfish. Sometimes the townsfolk suffer crushing tragedies, sometimes minor misfortunes; Lu always finds a way to keep focus on the "idiocy of rural life", and yet he never puts any polemics or multi-page rants on the page, merely gentle irony at how funny all this senselessness is.

Ah-Q's story itself is one of the best examples. Its eponymous hero is an Ignatius P. Reilly-type loser who suffers endless humiliations yet always finds "moral victories" at the end of each one. He does menial odd jobs throughout town, always messing things up while thinking himself far above whatever he's doing, leaping from blunder to blunder and desperately searching for people even weaker than he is to bully so he can feel better about himself, until he has a final encounter with the authorities that he can't cringe his way out of. Apparently Marxists had a complicated relationship with the part where Ah-Q decides to be a revolutionary but then sleeps through his chance to join them; I personally thought that his poor luck there was a perfect complement to his general cowardice. "Village Opera" is another one of my favorites from the first collection for the way it folds a funny criticism of Chinese opera into an evocative example of childhood nostalgia, or "A Small Incident", where a man involved in a rickshaw accident ponders his own callousness and willingness to (literally) trample over other people to get where he needs to.

The stories are even stronger in Hesitation, the second collection, I think because Lu had gotten more experienced but also because they're slightly longer and give him more room to work in. "The Loner" is a long and moving look at a curiously arms-length friendship "bracketed at its beginning and end by funerals", with both the narrator and his somewhat distant friend's lives going through ups and down of fortune until fate decides to taketh away from the friend as surely as it had giveth to him. It's quite sad, but the next one, "In Memoriam", is by far the saddest, and possibly the best, of the whole lot. Its depiction of the breakdown of two people's love and "poor but happy" marriage under the stresses of their terrible poverty and the weight of society's outdated norms is heartbreaking. But Lu is also able to throw in hilarious bits like the guy in "The Divorce" who's trying to sell "an 'anus-stopper': used by the ancients in burials, to stop up the anus of the deceased", which keeps the whole thing from getting too gloomy.

Interestingly, the preface to the 30s-era third collection "Old Stories Retold" mentions that it took by far the longest to write. It's a mixture of retellings of well-known episodes from Chinese mythology with historical fiction vignettes. One of the best moments is at the end of "Gathering Ferns", where a woman, who had inadvertently caused the starvation deaths of two brothers who were on a sort of hunger strike against a king they disliked, tells a made-up story about a magic deer they had offended to the other townspeople to absolve herself of blame: "'Heaven was so disgusted by their greed, he told the roe deer to stop coming. They deserved to starve! I had nothing to do with it - they brought it on themselves, the greedy wretches.' Her audiences always sighed as she concluded her story – the worry lifting from their bodies. Now, if ever they thought of the brothers, they were hazy figures, squatted at the foot of a cliff, their white-bearded mouths gaping open to devour the deer." It's a great example of the desperate urge to avoid responsibility people have, and how eager we all are to swallow anything as long as it has a moral that fits our prejudices.

The collection and the book closes with "Bringing Back the Dead", a funny sendup of Daoism which wryly recasts the myth of Job as a joking discussion between philosopher Zhuangzi and the God of Fate that ends with a very confused, helpless resurrected corpse. I was struck by the irony of Lu spending all this time writing about China's religious heritage and symbols of the past when his main literary goal had been to show how absurd China's decadence and stagnation was, but I suppose it makes sense that only someone who really loved the country, senile mythology, ideology, and all, could have had the proper perspective to write such scathing takedowns of its effects on people. To use an American example, it reminded me a bit of the story of the Duke and the Dauphin in Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn, where only someone who actually cared about the country could make a story of people's ignorance and gullibility so affectionate and amusing. It's easy to see why later reformers and revolutionaries liked his work so much, but though it's unfortunate that this book contains essentially all the fiction he ever wrote since it means there's not any more to read, there's enough great material in here to shame plenty of lesser authors who wrote far more.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
aaronarnold | 2 autres critiques | May 11, 2021 |

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Œuvres
251
Aussi par
12
Membres
2,115
Popularité
#12,170
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
30
ISBN
383
Langues
16
Favoris
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