Hangzhou Essayist Wins Lu Xun Prize in Essay

来源 :文化交流 | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:hisandy
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  Lu Chunxiang, an editor of Hangzhou Daily and now an executive of the news organization, was awarded Lu Xun Literature Prize in Essay on November 9, 2010 at an award-giving ceremony held in Shaoxing Grand Theater in Shaoxing, the hometown of Lu Xun, a great man of letters in the early 20th century China. Lu’s “Sick Alphabets”, a collection of essays won him the top glory of the essay category of Lu Xun Literature Award, a top national literary honor issued every three years to writers that shine in essay, literary review, reportage, and poetry. Lu’s achievement is admirable, as testified by the fact that the jurors of the prize failed to find a winner in this same category three years ago and agreed to leave it vacant.
  “Sick Alphabets”, published in August 2009 by Shanghai Arts and Literature Press, caused a sensation among readers. The essay collection was launched in Shanghai Book Expo. It was one of the tenth of the best sellers at the book fair on the first day. The first 6,000 copies were snatched by wholesalers. Websites and traditional media published positive reviews and comments on the book. “Eight Minutes”, a book program at Hong Kong-based Phoenix Television which caters to a wide range of audiences in the mainland, talked about the book. A book program at CCTV, the largest national television network in China, recommended it to the national readers.
  Lu’s essays are highly appreciated because of his unique and innovative style. Lu believes that a critic should be a doctor and regards his criticism as helping curing social malaises. The essayist’s sharp analysis cut into various and frequently latest social phenomena. He also offers insight into the problems in some social institutions.
  Lu Chunxiang is not a doctor by career. He is from Tonglu, a rural county under the jurisdiction of Hangzhou, capital of eastern China’s coastal Zhejiang Province. Born in December 1961, Lu did not read medical books systematically in his youth, not did he ever practiced medicine. But he read extensively. His father was a leader in a rural commune. The position opened some doors to books which were not available to other youngsters in those days. His high school teacher later recalled that Lu scored 56 points in a placement test whereas the average was only 18.
  During his four years at Zhejiang Teachers University, Lu read eagerly and more extensively. He made thousands of book cards on which he jotted down some brief comments and summaries. Literary canons were a must. And he found he was especially fond of books on Chinese rhetoric. His graduation paper was on rhetoric and he was the only graduate whose paper was published in the university’s journal. The college studies enabled Lu to develop a sharp sense of language and become unusually sophisticated about words.
  After graduation from college, Lu came back to Tonglu and taught Chinese in a local middle school for seven years before he was promoted to run Tonglu News, a non-official newsletter issued by the county government. Within half a year, Lu turned the non-official newsletter into Tonglu Bimonthly, an official news media for the general public of the county. The publication expanded and finally the bimonthly became biweekly. After more than ten years at the newspaper, he was promoted to work as a deputy director of the county’s radio and television bureau. He began to write essays more seriously and systematically.
  In 2001, he resigned from his position and got transferred to Hangzhou Daily where he first worked as a commentator. Asked about his motive, he said he needed a greater platform for growth. The provincial capital’s newspaper indeed gave him a bigger platform. He was in charge of two columns in addition to working as a commentator. He reorganized the columns and invited some essayists of national renown specialized in social commentary to write for his columns. Pretty soon, the essays in the columns caught the national media’s attention. They were constantly reprinted in online news portals of national prominence.
  Lu has his guideline for his essay writing. He believes our time is different from that of Lu Xun. So essays of today may not necessarily function as daggers and spears. Essays can be tender in appearance; when an essayist needs to express anger and tension, he can express them in implicit ways. He believes essays should act as surgery scalpels to remove social defects. In his eyes, good essays focus on seemingly small topics against a much larger background and bring a sense of satisfaction to readers.
  Lu explores possibilities in essay writing. As early as 1999, he began to publish essays in a column called Experiment Style in Hangzhou Daily. He created five essays in the name of five medical prescriptions. Before he set out to write them, he read two books on traditional Chinese medicine and on the ways TCM prescriptions are written dialectically for individual patients and specific syndromes. Altogether he penned a series of over 60 essays under the same heading and they adopted a great variety of form varying from diary, dialogue, script, handbook, ranking list, memo, manual, technique transfer document, prescription, plan, argument in defense, to letter of congratulation. These essays were written in a simple style but they were exciting and enlightening.
  Since then, Lu Chunxiang has progressed steadily and established himself firmly as an essayist of national renown. In 2002 alone, four of his essays were selected as best essays of the year. One of them was a satire entitled “A Notice on Staging Celebrations in Commemoration of the 20,001st Anniversary of Chang E’s Flight to the Moon”. Judges argued about the essay and its form, something they had never seen in essay writing before. But they finally agreed that it was an innovative essay and elected it as a winner.
  Though Lu has never been a doctor, he understands writing essays can be compared fittingly with curing patients. He doesn’t rush to write essays and take his anger out. He judges more rationally and tries to strike at the roots of social malaises. Though believing there are many difficulties in building a modern society in China, the essayist is confident that we can swim and cross the river even though the river is so wide. He believes that an essayist does not hate this world. An essayist loves this world and has sympathy and compassion. An essayist tries to find the roots of ailments and provide useful prescriptions.
  Nowadays, Lu Chunxiang works as an executive in charge of the daily operation of the newspaper, but he still finds time to write essays. □
其他文献
当代中国农民画,是世界文化艺术宝库中的一朵奇葩,是当代中国农民时代精神的反映。去年7月,由中国文联、中国美协、中共浙江省委宣传部共同主办,浙江省文联、浙江省美协承办的“农民画时代时代画农民——全国农民绘画展”,在浙江美术馆举办。  本次展览凸显了新中国成立以来当代中国农民画家创作中所取得的突出成就,聚焦了新时期下中国农民社会经济文化生活的方方面面。浙江农民画表现出彩,有90件作品入选,其中15件获
期刊
At 57 seconds, 59 minutes, six o’clock on October 1, 2010, Chang’e Two lunar probe blasted off successfully from Xichang Launch Center. The launch was televised nationwide. In Desheng Town, Pingchang
期刊
一个普普通通的人,日夜守望在“天鹅湖”畔,随时准备救治受伤的天鹅。他把受伤的天鹅带回家中,当成自己的“孩子”,与它们同饮一井水,同住一间屋,等到天鹅伤势痊愈后,将它们放归大自然。30多年间,他花费40多万元,使500多只天鹅获得了新生。他就是现年51岁的“天鹅卫士”袁学顺。    “东方天鹅湖”位于山东荣成市成山镇境内,是一个海水与淡水交融的天然湖,面积约6平方公里。每年11月到次年4月,有大量的
期刊
Paintings by Chinese amateur rural artists are a unique phenomenon in the world of art. These paintings portray the spirit of the rural population in modern China, as convincingly testified by Nationa
期刊
“Let the Bullets Fly” was premiered on December 16th, 2010 and instantly showed every sign of becoming a blockbuster. The incomplete statistics on January 5 indicated it had grossed more than 500 mill
期刊
On the morning of November 12, 2010, the Olympic Sports Sculpture launching ceremony was held at the Guangzhou Olympic Committee’s hospitality center. International Olympic Committee President Dr. Jac
期刊
On an October morning in 2010, tea experts and scholars from seven tea organizations of China, Japan and Korea met on the West Lake in Hangzhou and presented their respective tea performances. The sho
期刊
Lu You (1125-1210), a great poet of the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279), is a distinct poet in the history of Chinese literature. He lived 85 years. Of the famous poets of the past, no one else live
期刊
I recently visited Taiwan for sightseeing with a group of amateur artists. I was deeply impressed by a wall of calligraphy at the Fo Kwang (Buddha Light) Mountain in Kaohsiung County. The wall shows i
期刊
Cheng Lin, presumably the first pop singer on the mainland, may be a symbol of the early 1980s for many of those born in the 1960s and the 1970s. She left the mainland in the late 1980s. She came back
期刊