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Wang Dulu

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Template:Chinese name

Wang Dulu

Xiaoyu (Chinese: 霄羽)
Native name
王葆祥
BornWang Baoxiang
1909
Beijing, China
Died12 February 1977[1]
Tieling, China
Pen nameWang Dulu (Chinese: 王度廬)
OccupationEditor / Writer
LanguageChinese
GenreWuxia
Years active1931 – August 1945
Spouse
Li Danquan (Chinese: 李丹荃)
(m. 1935)
Children3
RelativesWang Shianshen (Chinese: 王先生) (father)

Wang Baoxiang (Chinese: 王葆祥; 1909 – 12 February 1977),[1] was a Chinese mystery, science fiction, and wuxia romance novelist who wrote under the pseudonym Wang Dulu (simplified Chinese: 王度庐; traditional Chinese: 王度廬). Wang is also known by the courtesy name Xiaoyu (Chinese: 霄羽).

He is most well known in the West for his series of interlinked novels, collectively referred to as Crane-Iron Series, which includes Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. The novel been adapted to film and television several times, most notably the award-winning film adaptation of the same name directed by Ang Lee.

Early life

Wang was born in 1909 in Beijing to a poor family of Bannerman background. (His ancestors were ethnic Han Chinese adopted into the Manchu Eight Banners.)[2] He worked as an editor for a newspaper agency, and as a clerk for a merchant association before becoming a writer. He is reported to have been self-educated. However, he graduated high school in 1924, and worked infrequently as a teacher until he moved to Beijing in 1931.[1] He also worked as freelance editor and journalist.

He and Li Danquan were married in 1935.[1] They had three children. Some sources credit Li as a working as journalist or editor at Minyabao (Chinese: 民意报), a daily newspaper, where Wang also worked.

Career

Wang wrote more than twenty novels from 1931 to 1949, though some sources attribute as many fifty novels to him.[3] Most of his earlier works were detective and mystery novels.

He began writing wuxia novels after moving to Qingdao, sometime before 1938. The Epoch Times reported that Wang wrote serialized stories for Qingdao Xinmin Daily (Chinese: 青島新民報) newspaper during this period.[3] From 1939 to 1949, Wang produced as many as sixteen wuxia novels.[1]

Crane-Iron Series

Wang most popular works are collectively referred to as the Crane-Iron Series (Chinese: 鶴鐵系列), named after the first characters in the titles of the first and last installments in the series. The series five novels chronicle the struggles of four generations of youxia (simplified Chinese: 游侠; traditional Chinese: 遊俠), often translated as wandering heroes. Each novel contains elements which link it with the others.

Portions or possibly all of the novels may have been serialized. The publication history is not clear. Wang was also known to self-publish, and promote his own works.[3] The following titles are arranged in internal chronological order rather than by their publication date:

  1. Crane Startles Kunlun (Chinese: 鶴驚崑崙, serialized 1940-1941[4])
  2. Precious Sword, Golden Hairpin (Chinese: 寶劍金釵, serialized 1938-1939; collected edition 1939[5])
  3. Sword Force, Pearl Shine (Chinese: 劍氣珠光, serialized 1939-1940; collected edition 1941[6])
  4. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (Chinese: 臥虎藏龍, serialized 1941-1942; collected edition 1948[7])
  5. Iron Knight, Silver Vase (Chinese: 鐵騎銀瓶, serialized 1942-1944; collected edition 1948[8])

Crane Startles Kunlun was written third, after Sword Force, Pearl Shine, and serialized under the title Dancing Crane, Singing Luan (Chinese: 舞鶴鳴鸞記). The official website of actress Michelle Yeoh includes an English-language summary of the series.[9]

Translations

The two first volumes were translated into French, and published by Calmann-Lévy. As of 2017, no official English language translations of his novels exist. However, there is a manhua series of the same name (and a second, revised edition), created by Andy Seto. The plot of the manhua departs substantially from the novels.

An unofficial English translation of Crane Startles Kunlun exists, and a translation is currently in progress for Precious Sword, Golden Hairpin.[10]

Adaptations

Ang Lee's 2000 film adaptation, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, included elements from other books the Crane series, and also took liberties with the novel it was based on. The changes emphasized the romantic relationships between the protagonists from the novel. The film was also pitched as a martial-arts adaptation of Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen.[11]

In 2013, The Weinstein Company announced an English-language adaptation of Iron Knight, Silver Vase was in development, with Ronny Yu attached to direct.[12] The film was later renamed Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: Sword of Destiny, and principal photography began in August 2014, with Yuen Woo-ping as director.

Later life and death

After the Chinese Civil War, Wang was assigned to work as a school teacher by Communist leaders, who labelled him an "old literati". He was forbidden from producing new works.[3] Following his retirement, possibly around 1966, he was labelled a "reactionary literati", thus the Communist Party punitively sentenced him to farm labor.[3][1]

He died from an unknown illness on 12 February 1977.[1] Prior to his death he made several attempts to return to his wife and family who were living in Shenyang.[3][1]

In 1999, Li Danquan met with Ang Lee and Michelle Yeoh during the production of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.[9]

Criticism

Wang is considered to be one of the pioneers of the modern wuxia genre, along with other established wuxia writers such as Jin Yong and Liang Yusheng.[according to whom?] He is also regarded as one of the "Ten Great Writers", and one of the "Four Great Writers of the Northern School", which included Li Shoumin, Gong Baiyu and Zheng Zhengyin.[citation needed]

Zhang Gansheng, a scholar of modern and contemporary Chinese literature, has characterized Wang as perfecting the wuxia genre, and paving the way for a generation of great writers.[citation needed] However, according to Xu Sinian, another scholar, there has not been any detailed critique of Wang's works, apart from that of the Taiwanese scholar Ye Hongsheng.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Duzan, Brigitte (2014-05-11). "chinese-shortstories.com". chinese-shortstories.com. Retrieved 2019-07-18.
  2. ^ 《金剛玉寶劍》總序,北岳文藝出版社,2017, p. 6: "王氏當屬編入滿洲鑲黃旗的“漢姓人”...滿人把他們視為同族。"
  3. ^ a b c d e f 黃, 大平 (2001-05-15). "《臥虎藏龍》作者王度廬的坎坷一生" [The difficult life of Wang Duyu, the author of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon]. The Epoch Times (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved 2019-07-18.
  4. ^ https://baike.baidu.com/item/王度庐/171847?fr=aladdin
  5. ^ https://baike.baidu.com/item/王度庐/171847?fr=aladdin
  6. ^ https://baike.baidu.com/item/王度庐/171847?fr=aladdin
  7. ^ https://baike.baidu.com/item/王度庐/171847?fr=aladdin
  8. ^ https://baike.baidu.com/item/王度庐/171847?fr=aladdin
  9. ^ a b "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Novels & Prequel". MichelleYeoh.info. Retrieved 2012-11-26.
  10. ^ Andy (2007-07-09). "中翻英圖書館 Translations: The Crane Startles Kunlun, Chapter 1". tu-shu-guan.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2012-11-26.
  11. ^ "15 High-Flying Facts About Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon". Mental Floss. 2015-12-07. Retrieved 2019-07-18.
  12. ^ Pulver, Andrew (2013-01-25). "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon sequel on its way – without Ang Lee". The Guardian. London.