Who adapted spring silkworm from the novel of the same name?

Spring Silkworm is adapted from Mao Dun's novel of the same name. Spring Silkworm is one of Mao Dun's rural trilogy, which was first published in the first issue of Modern Volume 2 in November 1932, and then entered Kaiming Bookstore in May 1933. The novel takes the water town in the south of the Yangtze River as the background and sericulture as the main line. It describes the tense and hard work of the silkworm farmer Lao Tongbao's family, which won an unprecedented harvest of spring silkworms, but instead owed money and sold land, resulting in a "loss of mulberry fields with 15 loads of leaves and a debt of 3 yuan", reflecting the cruel social reality of rural economic depression and farmers' bumper harvest in the early 193s.

Introduction to Mao Dun

Mao Dun was originally named Shen Dehong, and his pen names are Mao Dun, Lang Loss, Xuanzhu, Fang Bi, Zhi Jing, Pu Lao, Wei Ming, Shen Zhongfang, Shen Mingfu, etc., whose name is Yan Bing, and he is from Tongxiang City, Jiaxing City, Zhejiang Province. China is a modern writer, literary critic, cultural activist and social activist.

Mao Dun was born in a family with novel ideas and received a new education since childhood. He was admitted to Peking University Preparatory School and worked in the Commercial Press after graduation. Since then, he has embarked on the road of reforming China's literature and art. He is a pioneer of the New Culture Movement and one of the founders of China's revolutionary literature and art.

Mao Dun is also an excellent calligrapher. Its word layout is meticulous and rigorous, its brushwork is refined and subtle, elegant and elegant, and it seems to be based on the thin gold body. However, in fact, it is learned from the Epitaph of Dong Meiren, from which Mao Dun takes its beauty and firmness, thus giving people a clear and refreshing feeling, while the middle palace is tight, the lines are elegant, slender and not weak, and the show is quite elastic.