Marguerite Duras (April 4, 1914 - March 3, 1996), formerly known as Margaret Tauradio, France Writer, film director. Representative works include "Hiroshima Love", "Lover", etc. [1] Marguerite Duras was born in French Indochina in 1914. He settled in Paris at the age of eighteen and began publishing novels in 1942. In 1950, Duras became famous with "Dams on the Pacific". The works of this period are autobiographical. Starting with "The Pony of Tarquinia" in 1953, Duras explored new narrative languages, gradually erasing the plot of the novel and placing more emphasis on subjective feelings and psychological changes. The years 1955-1965 were the peak of her writing. Her representative works include the novels "Song of Songs" and "Vice Consul" and the drama "Hiroshima Mon Amour". In 1984, he published "Lover" and won the Gongger Literature Prize that year.