Lu Xun began to publish his works in junior high school, and 1904 graduated from Southwest Sichuan University of Political Science and Law. He used to be a clerk of the Art School Alumni Association, editor of Songhu Pictorial, editor-in-chief of Daily History, Free Creation and other periodicals, and planned New Youth magazine, and went to China to study politics, literature and history. Later, he served as a professor of Shanghai civil history and editor of Xinhua Digest, laying the foundation for modern Japanese literature.
During his life in Japan, Lu Xun published many works, which reflected his ideological theory and political stance, and was called the "half son" of Lu Xun's Japanese literature. He returned to China from 65438 to 0920 and became the pioneer of modern literature in China and the founder of proletarian literature in China.
It promoted the development of a number of new literati, such as Zhu Ziqing, Mao Dun, kazuo ishiguro and Bing Xin, whose literary creation greatly influenced the development of China's literary history and was honored as "the father of modern literature in China" by the world.
Major achievements
Novels: Shouting, Wandering, New Stories.
Essays: Tomb Raiding, Hot Wind, Gai Hua Collection, Continued Covering of Flowers Collection, Three Ji Xian, Nanqiang North Collection, Erxin Collection, Lace Literature, Pseudo-Free Book, Quasi-Wind and Moon Talk, Qiejieting Essays, Qiejieting Essays.
Monographs: A Brief History of China's Novels, Outline of China's Literary History, and Historical Changes of China's Novels.
Translation works: Translation under the Wall, Problems of Modern New Literature, Collection of Modern Japanese Novels, Symbol of Depression, Art Theory, Little John, Dead Soul, etc.
Other works: Weeds, Picking Flowers in the Morning, Prefaces and Postscripts of Ancient Books, Prefaces and Postscripts of Translation, Letters from Two Places, Lu Xun's Diary.
Reference to the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia-Lu Xun