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Understanding Wild Grass by Talking to Oneself: Lu Xun’s Yecao through the Lens of Ziyan Ziyu and the Prism of the Past |
Jon Eugene von Kowallis( ) |
| Chinese Studies Program, School of Humanities and Languages, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia |
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Abstract This article makes a reinterpretation of Lu Xun’s acclaimed prose poetry collection Yecao (Wild grass), written between 1924-27, by reading it in conjunction with a rediscovered prototype consisting of seven pieces published in Guomin gongbao (The citizen’s gazette) between August and September 1919 under the title Ziyan ziyu (Talking to oneself). Lu Xun’s baihua prose style had advanced considerably in the interim, but the author discerns a degree of thematic overlap between the two collections, on the basis of which he proposes answers to key questions that have been asked about Yecao since its first publication, concluding that it is still as fresh and avant-garde a collection to readers today as it was nearly one hundred years ago.
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| Keywords
Lu Xun (1881-1936)
Yecao
Wild Grass
Chinese prose poetry
sanwen shi
modern Chinese literature
May Fourth
New Culture Movement
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Issue Date: 08 August 2019
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