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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mao_DunMao Dun - Wikipedia

    Mao Dun. Shen Dehong ( Shen Yanbing; 4 July 1896 [1] – 27 March 1981), best known by the pen name of Mao Dun, was a Chinese novelist, essayist, journalist, playwright, literary and cultural critic. He was highly celebrated for his realist novels, including Midnight, which depicts life in cosmopolitan Shanghai.

  2. Jun 30, 2024 · Mao Dun (born July 4, 1896, Tongxiang, Zhejiang province, China—died March 27, 1981, Beijing) was a Chinese literary critic and author, generally considered republican China’s greatest realist novelist. Forced to interrupt his schooling in 1916 because he ran out of money, Shen Yanbing became a proofreader at the Commercial Press in ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Mao Dun (Mao Tun July 4, 1896–March 27, 1981) was the pen name of Shen Dehong (Shen Te-hung), pseudonym Shen Yen-ping, a twentieth-century Chinese novelist, cultural critic, journalist, editor and author, generally considered republican China's greatest realist novelist. He adopted 'Mao Dun' (矛盾), meaning "contradiction," as his pen name ...

  4. www.themodernnovel.org › asia › other-asiaMao Dun - The Modern Novel

    Mao Dun (aka Mao Tun) was born in 1896 in Zhejiang Province, attending Beijing University between 1913 and 1915 but family financial circumstances made him drop out and become a professional translator. In 1920 he was a co-founder with Ye Shengtao of the Literary Association which advocated literary realism. In the 1930s he became involved in ...

  5. www.wikiwand.com › en › Mao_DunMao Dun - Wikiwand

    Jul 23, 2019 · Shen Dehong, best known by the pen name of Mao Dun, was a Chinese novelist, essayist, journalist, playwright, literary and cultural critic. He was highly celebrated for his realist novels, including Midnight, which depicts life in cosmopolitan Shanghai. Mao was one of the founders of the Chinese Communist Party and participated in a number of left-wing cultural movements during the 1920s and ...

  6. In Mao Dun's view the peasants' lives are being destroyed by these two systems much in the same way the mulberry leaves are devoured by unattractive, lowly worms, which, in turn, produce a nonessential luxury good used to adorn the backsides and flatter the vanity of the world's exploitative middle and upper classes.

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  8. Mar 28, 1981 · Mao Dun, a writer who said literature should not be an ''intoxication'' but whose ideology-laced works showed a psychological penetration, died today, the official news agency Xinhua reported. He ...

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