Lu Xun's Last Days and After
Because Lu Xun as a man, not just as a writer, loomed so large in the consciousness of his age, his death was both an event of great public importance and a bitter loss to many. Of the hundreds of millions of deaths in China during the 38 years of the Republic none made a bigger impact, with the pos...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The China quarterly (London) 1982-09, Vol.91 (91), p.424-445 |
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description | Because Lu Xun as a man, not just as a writer, loomed so large in the consciousness of his age, his death was both an event of great public importance and a bitter loss to many. Of the hundreds of millions of deaths in China during the 38 years of the Republic none made a bigger impact, with the possible exception of that of Sun Yatsen, which though perhaps less deeply felt had a more immediate political effect. To this day, educated Chinese who were old enough in October 1936 to be aware of what was happening in the world remember how and where they heard the news, just as Europeans of the same generation remember learning of the outbreak of the Second World War. |
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source | HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete |
subjects | Art exhibitions Bookstores Breathing Death Diseases Eschatology Funerals Japanese culture Woodcuts Writers |
title | Lu Xun's Last Days and After |
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