Mao Zedong is the leader of China people, a great Marxist, a great proletarian revolutionist, strategist and theorist, the main founder and leader of China Party, China People's Liberation Army and People's Republic of China (PRC), a great pioneer of Marxism in China, a great patriot and national hero of China in modern times, the core of the first generation of central leadership of China Party, and a generation who led the Chinese people to completely change their own destiny and national outlook.
Mao Zedong's poems have distinct characteristics of the times and unique artistic style. His poems are based on revolutionary practice and full of revolutionary passion and optimism. Mao Zedong's poems not only reflect his political thoughts, but also his personal feelings and aesthetic concepts.
He has a firm revolutionary belief and patriotism, and his poems are full of love and loyalty to the people and the revolutionary cause. At the same time, Mao Zedong's poems are full of revolutionary optimism. He believes that the revolutionary cause will surely win, and China will surely usher in a bright future.
The characteristics of Mao Zedong's poetry;
1, high artistic conception: Mao Zedong's poems often show the struggle course of China people and the great prospect of revolutionary cause with magnificent scenes and broad perspectives.
He is good at using figurative metaphors and vivid descriptions to bring readers into a magnificent and lofty artistic world. For example, the scenery of the northland, the freezing of thousands of miles, the snow drifting in Wan Li, the past, the number of romantic figures, and the lofty aspirations of today's people all make people feel a lofty and magnificent artistic enjoyment.
2. Philosophism: Mao Zedong's poems often contain profound philosophy and rich ideological connotations, reflecting his deep thinking and understanding of social reality and life experience. He is good at using dialectics and historical materialism to organically combine the artistry and ideology of poetry. For example, the Red Army is not afraid of difficult expeditions, and Qian Shan's poem "Seven Laws of the Long March" not only expresses the Red Army's courage and fearlessness, but also contains the profound philosophy of "Where there is a will, there is a way".
3. Concise language: Mao Zedong's poetic language is concise, simple and natural, and he does not deliberately pursue flowery rhetoric and complex sentence patterns, but expresses profound thoughts and feelings in plain language. He is good at using colloquial and popular language style to make poetry closer to people's lives and emotions. For example, the simple slogan of serving the people in Serving the People is easy to understand and deeply rooted in the hearts of the people.