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Rickshaw Boy or Camel Xiangzi is a novel by the Chinese author Lao She about the life of a fictional Beijing rickshaw man. It is considered a classic of 20th-century Chinese literature.
Lao She, pen name of Shu Qingchun. He was a banner person, belonging to the "Red Banner" of the "Manchurian eight banners." He lived in the last years of the Qing Dynasty, when the society is turbulent and the people lived in destitution. Seeing the Qing Dynasty on the decline, his and Beijing people's life are broken...
Four Generations Under One Roof is a classic among modern Chinese novels and the representative work of Lao she. Set during the outbreak of the Marco polo bridge incident and the occupation of Peiping by the Japanese, this book depicts the life of the Qi family, with four generations under one roof. It vividly and clearly describes the honor or disgrace, ups and downs and life and death of the people of various sorts.
Four Generations Under One Roof is a classic among modern Chinese novels and the representative work of Lao she. Set during the outbreak of the Marco polo bridge incident and the occupation of Peiping by the Japanese, this book depicts the life of the Qi family, with four generations under one roof. It vividly and clearly describes the honor or disgrace, ups and downs and life and death of the people of various sorts.
Rickshaw is a new translation of the twentieth-century Chinese classic Lo-t'o Hsiang Tzu, the first important study of a laborer in modern Chinese literature. While the rest of the Chinese literary world debated hotly, and for years, the value of proletarian literature, Lao She wrote the novel that the left wing insisted on but failed to produce.
This play portrays the life of the owner of a Beijing teahouse and his customers through 50 years of upheaval in China. Spanning from 1898 to the late 1940s, scenes change from late Qing dynasty to the early days of the Republic, then after to post-1945 when Guomindang soldiers take over the city.
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