Explanation of literary terms in troubled times

On Gone with the Times is a book published by Indian Press in 2009 by Hu Lancheng. This book mainly talks about calligraphy and flowers, comments on contemporary thoughts, tries to restore the historical context, and provides real texts, hoping to be beneficial to the study of Hu Lancheng.

Hu Lancheng

Originally known as Hu Jirui, 1906 was born in Shengxian County, Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province. During the Anti-Japanese War, she was the editor-in-chief of China Daily in Shanghai and South China Daily in Hong Kong, and later served as the deputy director of the propaganda department of Wang Jingwei's regime and the director of the rule of law department of the Executive Yuan. She is a controversial scholar in modern China, especially her love affair with Zhang Ailing, an important contemporary female writer, has attracted much attention.

Extended data:

In the 20th century, China's literary world was full of twists and turns, and literature was intertwined with nationality, war, ideology and so on. However, Hu Lancheng left many unique literary comments: Zhang Ailing was "a sparkling person in the Republic of China".

It reveals that "after Lu Xun, there is Zhang Ailing" and prose essays with the same unique charm should not be ignored by modern literary theorists.

This book is Hu Lancheng's Selected Works of Literary Creation and Criticism in the 1940s, including comments on Zhang Ailing, Lu Xun, Zhou Zuoren and Louis Ji Xian, as well as comments on A Dream of Red Mansions and Jin Ping Mei.

Reference materials? Baidu encyclopedia-talking about troubled times