Wild Grass and Morning Blossoms Gathered at Dusk

Wild Grass and Morning Blossoms Gathered at Dusk

Wild Grass and Morning Blossoms Gathered at Dusk

Wild Grass and Morning Blossoms Gathered at Dusk

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Overview

A brilliant new translation of the short improvisational fiction and memoirs of Lu Xun, the father of modern Chinese literature.

This captivating translation assembles two volumes by Lu Xun, the founder of modern Chinese literature and one of East Asia’s most important thinkers at the turn of the twentieth century. Wild Grass and Morning Blossoms Gathered at Dusk represent a pinnacle of achievement alongside Lu Xun’s famed short stories.

In Wild Grass, a collection of twenty-three experimental pieces, surreal scenes come alive through haunting language and vivid imagery. These are landscapes populated by ghosts, talking animals, and sentient plants, where a protagonist might come face-to-face with their own corpse. By depicting the common struggle of real and imagined creatures to survive in an inhospitable world, Lu Xun asks the deceptively simple question, “What does it mean to be human?”

Alongside Wild Grass is Morning Blossoms Gathered at Dusk, a memoir in eight essays capturing the literary master’s formative years and featuring a motley cast of dislocated characters—children, servants, outcasts, the dead and the dying. Giving voice to vulnerable subjects and depicting their hopes and despair as they negotiate an unforgiving existence, Morning Blossoms affirms the value of all beings and elucidates a central predicament of the human condition: feeling without a home in the world.

Beautifully translated and introduced by Eileen J. Cheng, these lyrical texts blur the line between autobiography and literary fiction. Together the two collections provide a new window into Lu Xun’s mind and his quest to find beauty and meaning in a cruel and unjust world.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674287662
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 09/27/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

Lu Xun (1881–1936), born Zhou Shuren, was a writer of fiction, essayist, poet, translator, and literary critic.

Eileen J. Cheng is Professor of Chinese at Pomona College. She is author of Literary Remains: Death, Trauma, and Lu Xun’s Refusal to Mourn and coeditor of Jottings under Lamplight, a collection of Lu Xun’s essays.

Theodore Huters is Professor Emeritus of Chinese at the University of California, Los Angeles, and Chief Editor of Renditions, the Chinese University of Hong Kong’s translation journal. He is author of Bringing the World Home: Appropriations of the West in Late Qing and Early Republican China, editor of China’s New Order, and coeditor of Revolutionary Literature in China.

Table of Contents

Cover Title Page Copyright Contents Introduction Wild Grass Bordering on the Divine: Translator’s Introduction to Wild Grass Preface to the English Translation of Wild Grass (1932) Inscriptions Autumn Night The Shadow’s Farewell The Alms Seeker My Lost Love Revenge Revenge (II) Hope Snow The Kite Story of Good Things The Passerby Dead Fire The Dog’s Retort The Good Hell That Was Lost Tombstone Inscriptions Tremors on the Border of Degradation An Argument After Death Such a Fighter The Clever Man, the Fool, and the Slave The Preserved Leaf Amid the Pale Bloodstains Awakening Morning Blossoms Gathered at Dusk Vulnerable Subjects: Translator’s Introduction to Morning Blossoms Gathered at Dusk Introductory Note Dogs • Cats • Mice Ah Chang and The Classic of Mountains and Seas The Illustrated Twenty-Four Filial Exemplars Fair of the Five Fierce Gods Wu Chang [Life Is Unpredictable] From the Garden of Myriad Grasses to the Three Flavors Studio Father’s Illness Trivial Recollections Professor Fujino Fan Ainong Afterword Notes Lu Xun’s Oeuvre Acknowledgments
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