Li Guangtian
"Flower Tide" This article is selected from "Selected Prose in Yunnan" and was written by the author in the spring of 1962. At that time, China had just experienced three consecutive years of natural disasters, production was beginning to recover, and the author himself also experienced some setbacks. He has lived in Kunming for more than ten years and has seen flowers bloom and fall many times. Faced with such an unusual spring, he expressed his feelings by describing the lively scene of thousands of people enjoying flowers. "Flower tide" refers to the tidal wave of begonia flowers, as well as the crowds of people admiring the flowers and talking about them.
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Li Guangtian (1906 .10.1-1968.11.2) from Zouping, Shandong. After being admitted to Jinan No. 1 Normal University in 1923, he began to be exposed to the new trends of thought and new literature since the May Fourth Movement. In 1929, he entered the preparatory course of the Department of Foreign Languages ??at Peking University. He published poems and essays in the supplement of "North China Daily" and "Modern" magazine, and got to know Bian Zhilin, a classmate in the department, and He Qilao from the philosophy department. Later, they published a collection of poems by three people, "Hanyuan Collection", and were known as the "Three Poets of Hanyuan".
After graduating from Peking University in 1935, he returned to Jinan to teach. He continued to write a lot of prose, which were collected into "Gallery Collection" and "Silver Fox Collection". In the autumn of 1941, he arrived in Kunming and taught at Southwest Associated University. In addition to prose, he also wrote the novel "Gravity".
After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, he taught at Nankai University and Tsinghua University. Joined the Communist Party of China in 1948. After liberation, he served as director of the Chinese Department of Tsinghua University. In 1949, he was elected as a member of the Federation of Literary and Art Circles and a director of the Federation of Literary and Art Circles at the First National Congress of Literary and Art Circles. In 1951, he was appointed deputy provost of Tsinghua University. In 1952, he was transferred to Vice President and President of Yunnan University. He has successively served as director of the Institute of Literature, Yunnan Branch of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, vice chairman of the Yunnan Branch of the Writers Association, and director of the Chinese Writers Association.
He is one of the outstanding modern prose writers in China. He has compiled collections such as "The Collection of Sparrows", "Outside the Circle", "Echo", "Essays on the Side of the Sun", etc.
Bibliography of works:
"Hanyuan Collection" (Collection of Poems), collected by He Qifang and Bian Zhilin, 1936, Business
"Gallery Collection" (Collection of Prose) 1936, Business
"Silver Fox Collection" (a collection of essays), 1936, Wen Sheng
"Collection of Birds" (a collection of essays), 1939, Wen Sheng
"Circle" "Outside" (collection of essays) 1942, Chongqing National Bookstore
"Echo" (collection of essays) 1943, Guilin Chunchao Society
"Happy Group" (collection of short stories) 1943, Guilin Work Society
"The Art of Poetry" (Poetry Theory) 1943, Kaiming
"Shrub Collection" (Selected Prose) 1944, Kaiming
"The Golden Jar" (Short story collection) 1946, Vincent.
"Gravity" (novel) 1947, Morning Light
"Essays by the Sun" (Essay collection) 1948, Vincent
"On Creation" (essay) 1948, Kaiming
"Literary Letters" 1949, Kaiming
"Journey to the West" (collection of essays) 1949, Cultural Work Society
< p>"Thirty Prose" 1956, writer"Spring City Collection" (Collection of Poems) 1958, writer
"Selected Prose of Li Guangtian" 1980, Yunnan People
"Selected Works of Li Guangtian" 1981, foreign language
"Selected Works of Li Guangtian" 1982, Baihua
"Selected Poems of Li Guangtian" 1982, People of Yunnan
"Collected Works of Li Guangtian" "(Volume 1 to 5) 1983-1986, Shandong Literature and Art
"Li Guangtian's Representative Works" 1987, Yellow River
"Ashima" (long poem) compiled based on Dai folk stories, 1960 , humanities