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Qin Mu
Native name
秦牧
BornLin a Shu
(1919-08-19)19 August 1919
 British Hong Kong
Died(1992-10-14)14 October 1992
Guangzhou, Guangdong,  People's Republic of China
Pen nameQin Mu
Occupationessayist, Novelist
LanguageMandarin
SpouseZi Feng

Qin Mu (Chinese: 秦牧, originally named Lin a Shu, also known as Lin Pai Guang, Lin Jue Fu, Lin Huan Shi[1], August 19, 1919 - October 14, 1992)is a Chinese educator and writer. He is best-known for his essays, particularly Travels in Xinjiang which is included in high school textbooks. He also writes novels, plays, poems and criticism.[2] He was the vice editor-in-chief of Yangcheng Evening News and the head of Chinese at Jinan University.[3] He insists that in no way could a man of letters write any outstanding work if he was not dedicated to society and responsible for the people.[4]

Jinan University where Mr Qin served as head of Chinese

Biography

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Dongli Town to which Mr Qin's family line coule be traced back

Qin Mu was a modern celebrated educator and a prolific writer born in British Hong Kong, whose family line could be traced back to Dongli Town, Chenghai District, Shantou, Guangdong Province. He spent his childhood and youth in Malaysia and Singapore respectively. He returned to China and pursued his studies in Chenghai, Shantou and Hong Kong. During the period of the Second Sino-Japanese War, he served as actor, worker in the battlefield, teacher, and editor[5]. After the victory of the war, he led a literary life in Hong Kong for three years. After the foundation of People's Republic of China, he served as section chief of Education Department of Guangdong Province, editor in chief of the Publishing House of China. He joined the Communist Party of China in 1963. He passed away in 1992. [6]

Writing Style

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Qin Mu's writing is flexible, without a tinge of rigidness. His essays are full of philosophical meanings. One significant feature that distinguishes him from any other writers is the wide variety of themes, from essays with old days as the background to essays he writes to make comments on the occurrences of the day. In his writing, he envisages the future century, recalls the ancient times, and glorifies the constructors of new age society. From the past to the present, from plants and animals to human beings, from folk tales to modern technologies, all could be found in his essays, which are included in textbooks of history. [6]

During the Cultural Revolution

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His collection of essays Collecting Shells in the Sea of the Arts (藝海拾貝) was published in 1962. In 1966 when the Cultural Revolution broke out, he became one of the targets of criticism. The campaign against the collection began. Teachers and students who engaged in the campaign denounced the collection as "poisonous grass", even though they had no understanding of what the collection was about and what "poisonous grass" meant. Afterwards, it was revealed that Qin wrote an article on Mao Zedong's return to Shaoshan, giving an account of Mao's visiting ancestral graves and his remarks before the tombs. The campaign then levelled criticism at the capitalist-roaders within the Party and he drew no public attention any more.

Works

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See Also

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References

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  1. ^ 中文百科在線 Retrieved. 27th Nov. 2014.
  2. ^ Independent Qin Mu Retrieved. 27th Nov. 2014.
  3. ^ 有一人 Retrieved. 8th Jan. 2015.
  4. ^ Chinese Literature Web Qin Mu in my eyes by Retrieved. 25th Dec. 2014.
  5. ^ 中國現當代作家辭典 Retrieved. 27th Nov. 2014.
  6. ^ a b 教育Wiki Retrieved. 3rd Dec. 2014.