Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What does Lu Xun continue to do? Impermanent scholar

What does Lu Xun continue to do? Impermanent scholar

What does Lu Xun continue to do? Impermanence scholar: This statement is wrong.

Lu Xun, formerly known as Zhou Zhangshou, later renamed Zhou Shuren, whose real name was Yushan, and later changed to Yucai, was born in Shaoxing, Zhejiang. A famous writer, thinker, revolutionary, educator, democracy fighter, an important participant in the New Culture Movement, and one of the founders of modern literature in China.

On photography and so on is an essay written by Lu Xun on1February 2, 924. Originally published in1March 8, 924, the 7th issue of Morning News, and included in Lu Xun's essay collection "Two Treatises on Jieting" published in 1938. In this article, Lu Xun criticized the photographer of new photography and the "appreciator" of photos.

Impermanence is an essay in Lu Xun's Morning Flowers and Evening Picks. Impermanence describes the image of impermanence that Lu Xun met God in the countryside and saw on the stage of drama when he was a child, which shows that the straightforward and fair image of impermanence is loved by the people because there is no justice in the world, and the wicked can't get what they deserve, and "fair trial is in the underworld".

Appreciate:

This is what a countryman wrote by Lu Xun can't do. I like this sentence very much. He vividly described the concept of life of the country people at that time in profound and beautiful language. Lu Xun thought that rural people would not write such a "burning" punch line, and also wrote that the quality of rural people at that time was low, which laid the foundation for the later impermanence of writing.

However, it is everyone's intention to joke with impermanence, because he is frank, talkative and human, and it is also the place where he finds true friends. This sentence reveals Lu Xun's admiration for impermanence, which can be seen from his respectful name "Mr. impermanence"