Zhou Zhou Ruchang, formerly known as Yu Yan, was named Min 'an, and later changed to Yu Yan. He used his pen names to read Shu, Cang Yu, Xi Xue, Gu Yan, Gong Yu, Shiwu, Qing Yu, Shiyan and Chuck. Male, Han nationality, 19 18, was born in Xianshuigu Town, Tianjin on March 4th. A well-known Redology scholar in China studied in the Graduate School of Western Languages Department and Chinese Department in yenching university. He is the first person to study A Dream of Red Mansions in New China after Hu Shi and others, and he is the main force and master of textual research schools at home and abroad. He has been a teacher of yenching university Western Language Department, lecturer of Foreign Languages Department of West China University and Sichuan University, editor of Classical Department of People's Literature Publishing House, member of the 5th-8th China People's Political Consultative Conference, member of China Association for the Promotion of Peaceful Reunification, member of Chinese Writers Association and Calligraphers Association, consultant of China Rhyme Society, China Couplet Society and China Grand View Garden Cultural Association, and honorary president of China Cao Xueqin Society. 199 1 year began to enjoy special government allowances. Deng Xiaoda once called it | "the greatest red scientist in China."
Academics focus on language, poetics and endorsement, and translation between Chinese and foreign languages; I have devoted my life to reciting, studying poetry, annotation, appreciation and theory, and also studying redology. More than 20 academic works have been published, and several more are being printed. Among them, A Dream of Red Mansions is the first and representative work.
1980 went to the United States to attend the "first international symposium on a dream of red mansions"; 1984, he was appointed by the state to the Soviet Union to inspect the stones in Leningrad. 1986- 1987, awarded by the Ruth Foundation of the United States, visited the United States to give lectures for one year and served as a visiting professor at the University of Wisconsin.