Famous writers who died in recent years

1. Ba Jin 2005.10.17

Ba Jin (1904.11.25-2005.10.17), whose original name was Li Yaotang, also had pen names such as Pei Gan, Ji Le, Hei Lang, Chun Feng, etc. Fu Gan. Han nationality, a native of Chengdu, Sichuan, and his ancestral home is Jiaxing, Zhejiang. Chinese writer, translator, social activist, non-partisan patriotic democrat. Ba Jin was born in a feudal bureaucratic family in Chengdu, Sichuan in November 1904. After the May 4th Movement, Ba Jin was deeply influenced by the new trend of thought, and under the influence of this thought, he began his personal anti-feudal struggle. In 1923, Ba Jin left home to study in Shanghai, Nanjing and other places, whereupon he began his half-century-long literary creation career.

2. Ji Xianlin 2009.7.11

Ji Xianlin (1911.8.6~2009.7.11): a native of Linqing, Liaocheng City, Shandong Province, China, with the courtesy name Xibu and Qizang. Internationally renowned Orientalist master, linguist, writer, Chinese scholar, Buddhist scholar, historian, educator and social activist. He has successively served as a member of the Department of Philosophy and Social Sciences of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Honorary President of Liaocheng University, Vice President of Peking University, Director of the Institute of South Asia, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and is a tenured professor of Peking University.

Study abroad in his early years. He is fluent in English, German, Sanskrit and Pali, can read Russian and French, and is especially proficient in Tocharian (the Indo-European language family with the widest distribution in the world today). an independent language) and is one of the only scholars in the world who is proficient in this language. As "the study of Sanskrit, Buddhism, and Tocharian literature is simultaneously promoted, and the research of Chinese literature, comparative literature, and literary theory is booming", his works are compiled into "Collected Works of Ji Xianlin", with 24 volumes. During his lifetime, he wrote three words about laurels: master of Chinese studies, academic leader, and national treasure.

3. Shi Tiesheng 2010.12.31

Shi Tiesheng (January 4, 1951 - December 31, 2010), Chinese writer and essayist. Born in Beijing in 1951. He graduated from the High School Affiliated to Tsinghua University in 1967 and went to Yan'an in 1969 to join the team. He returned to Beijing in 1972 due to paralysis of his legs. Later, he suffered from kidney disease and developed uremia. He relied on dialysis three times a week to maintain his life. Later, he served as a member of the National Committee of the Chinese Writers Association, Vice Chairman of the Beijing Writers Association, and Vice Chairman of the China Disabled Persons' Federation. He claims that his occupation is illness and his spare time is writing. He died of sudden cerebral hemorrhage at 3:46 a.m. on December 31, 2010 at the age of 59.

4. Mo Huaiqi 2014.7.27

Huaiqi was born in Chongqing on June 3, 1951. His pen names are Zhou Pingan and Zhang Daming. contemporary writers. Member of the Chinese Writers Association and vice chairman of the Chongqing Writers Association.

Graduated from junior high school in 1966 and joined the team in Neijiang, Sichuan. Graduated from the Chinese Department of Sichuan University in 1982. During his lifetime, he was the deputy director and professor of the Journalism Department of the School of Literature and Journalism of Chongqing Normal University. Began literary creation in 1980. One of the novels, "Shi Li Ren Jia", won the "Sichuan Literature" award. He is the author of "Selected Novels and Short Stories by Mo Huaiqi". His work "Walking" was selected into the 22nd Chinese lesson for the second grade of junior high school in the Jiangsu Education Press, and was also selected into the first Chinese lesson in the first volume of the first grade of the People's Education Press in 2013.

4. Zhang Xianliang 2014.9.27

Zhang Xianliang, male, is a national first-class writer, collector and calligrapher. Born in Nanjing in 1936, his ancestral home is Xuyi County, Jiangsu Province. Representative works: "Spirit and Flesh", "Greening Tree", "Half of a Man is a Woman", etc., three-dimensional literary works: Zhenbeibao Western Cinema, Old Yinchuan Street. He began literary creation as early as the early 1950s when he was in middle school. In 1955, he moved to Ningxia from Beijing and worked first as a farmer and then as a teacher. In 1957, during the "Anti-Rightist Movement", he was classified as a "rightist" for publishing the poem "Song of the Wind" and was sent to a farm for "reform through labor" for 22 years. After the Third Plenary Session of the Eleventh Central Committee of the Communist Party of China in 1979, he was rehabilitated and his reputation restored. He resumed writing and wrote novels, essays, reviews, and movie scripts, becoming one of the important contemporary Chinese writers. He once served as vice chairman and chairman of the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region Federation of Literary and Art Circles, chairman of the Ningxia Branch of the Chinese Writers Association, and served as a member of the Sixth CPPCC National Committee and a member of the Bureau of the Chinese Writers Association.

On September 27, 2014, the famous writer Zhang Xianliang passed away due to ineffective treatment at the age of 78.