I think that Lu Xun is not the number one person on the other side of the Taiwan Strait. Even if his works are not interfered by the political situation and can be published publicly in Taiwan, it will be the same. As far as Taiwanese writers are concerned, in my mind, " First" by age:
The first in the 1950s should be Lai He. He is known as "Taiwan's Lu Xun" and is a pioneer of modern Taiwanese literature.
The number one person in the 1950s should be Zhong Lihe, who was known as "the cultivator who fell in a pool of blood."
The number one writer in the 1960s should be Bo Yang, whose bold writing style and influence of his works go without saying.
The number one in the 1970s and 1980s should be Gao Yang. The so-called "Jin Yong exists wherever there are villages, and Gao Yang exists wherever there is well water", which shows his influence.
I think the quality of the works of these writers is no worse than Lu Xun from an objective perspective, and they have all made indelible contributions to the development of modern and contemporary literature in Taiwan.
As for the literature after the 1990s, due to the diversification of literature, it is difficult to make a hard ranking.
It can be seen that although literary achievements are objective things and can be quantitatively analyzed based on the quantity and quality of works, it does not deny that there are factors in it that are subjectively elevated or belittled by the rulers, which is the so-called subjective consciousness of The impact of objective factual evaluation.