急需一些关于老舍的资料,一些用英语写的短句,很急啊

作者&投稿:郴终 (若有异议请与网页底部的电邮联系)
关于老舍的英文资料~

Chinese playwright and author of humorous, satiric novels and short stories. Lao She is perhaps best known for his story LO-T'O HSIANG-TZU (1936, Rickshaw), a twentieth-century classic. An unauthorized and bowdlerized English translation, Rickshaw Boy, with a happy ending, appeared in 1945 and became a U.S. bestseller.

"The person we want to introduce is Hsing Tzu, not Camel Hsiang Tzu, because "Camel is only a nickname. We'll just say Hsiang Tzu for now, having indicated that there is a connection between Camel and Hsiang Tzu." (from Rickshaw)
Shu Quingchun (Lao She) was born Shu She-yü of Manchu descent in Beijing. His father, who was a guard soldier, died in a street battle during the 1900 Boxer uprising. To support her family and Lao Shê's private tutoring, his mother did laundry. "During my childhood," Lao She has later said, "I didn't need to hear stories about evil ogres eating children and so forth; the foreign devils my mother told me about were more barbaric and cruel than any fairy tale ogre with a huge mouth and great fangs. And fairy tales are only fairy tales, whereas my mother's stories were 100 percent factual, and they directly affected our whole family." (Lao Shê in Modern Chinese Writers, ed. by Helmut Martin and Jeffrey Kinkley, 1992)

Fatherless since early childhood, Lao She worked his way through Peking Teacher's College. After graduation he supported himself and his mother through a series of teaching and administrative posts. He served as a principal of an elementary school at the age of 17, and later he was a district supervisor. Lao She spent the years from 1924 to 1929 in London, where he taught Chinese at the School of Oriental and African Studies. By reading amongst other things the novels of Charles Dickens, Lao She improved his English, and decided to start his first novel.

In 1930 Lao She returned to China and continued to write and teach Chinese at Qilu and Shadong Universities. MAO CH'ENG CHI (1933, Cat Country) was a bitter satire about Chinese society. In NIU T'IEN-TZ'U CHUAN (1934, Heavensent), partly modelled on Fielding's Tom Jones, Lao She turned again to humor. He reversed his early individualist theme and stressed the futility of the individual's struggle against society as a whole. In Rickshaw Boy Lao She traces the degradation and ruin of an industrious Peking rickshaw puller, a peasant drawn to the city. To earn his living, he pulls a rented rickshaw from dawn till dark, enjoys briefly the status of owner-operator, and finally dies on a snowy night. Evan King's translation published in 1945 invented new characters and changed the ending.

The outbreak of the second Sino-Japanese War (1937-45) radically altered Lao She's views. Between the years 1937 and 1945 he wrote a number of plays, worked as a propagandist, and headed the All-China Anti-Japanese Writers Federation. After World War II Lao She published a gigantic novel in three parts, SSU-SHIH T'UNG-T'ANG (abridged translation The Yellow Storm). It dealt with life in Peking during the Japanese occupation of Manchuria. Between the years 1946 and 1949 Lao She lived in the United States on a cultural grant at the invitation of the Department of State. When the People's Republic was established in 1949, Lao She returned to China.

Among Lao Shê's most famous stories is 'Crescent Moon', written in the early stage of his creative life. It depicts the miserable life of a mother and daughter and their deterioration into prostitution. "I used to picture an ideal life, and it would be like a dream," the daughter thinks. "But then, as cruel reality again closed in on me, the dream would quickly pass, and I would feel worse than ever. This world is no dream - it's a living hell. " (from 'Crescent Moon')

Lao She was a member of the Cultural and Educational Committee in the Government Administration Council, a deputy to the National People's Congress, a member of the Standing Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, vice-chairman of the All-China Federation of Literature and Art and vice-chairman of the Union of Chinese Writers as well as chairman of the Beijing Federation of Literature and Art. He was named a 'People's Artist' and a 'Great Master of Language'. His plays, such as LUNG HSÜ-KOU (1951, Dragon Beard Ditch), became ideologically didactic, and did not reach the level of his former work. SHEN JUAN written in 1960, on the sixtieth anniversary of the Boxer uprising, was a four-act play about the Boxers. Lao She emphasized the anti-imperialistic zeal of the Boxers and the burning and killing carried out by the allied powers. During the Cultural Revolution, Lao She was publicly denounced and criticized, as a number of other writers and intellectuals. On October 24, 1966, Lao She was murdered or driven to suicide. His last novel, The Drum Singers (1952), was first published in English in the United States.

Since the fall of Chiang Ch'ing, guiding hand of the Cultural Revolution, in 1971, Lao She's works have been republished. In 1979, he was posthumously "rehabilitated" by the Communist Party. Several of his stories have been made into films, including This Life of Mine (1950, dir. by Shi Hui), Dragon Beard Ditch (1952, dir. by Xian Qun), Rickshaw Boy (1982, dir. by Zifeng Ling), The Teahouse (1982, dir. by Xie Tian), The Crescent Moon (1986, dir. by Huo Zhuang), The Drum Singers (1987, dir. by Tian Zhuangzhuang ), and The Divorce. Tian Zhuangzhuang's film version of The Drum Singers (1987) was mostly shot on location in Sichuan.

Lao She's most frequently performed plays is CHAGUAN (Teahouse), which was written in 1957. The events are set in the Beijing teahouse of Wang Lifa during three different periods: 1898 under the empire, the 1910s under the warlords and around 1945 after WW II. "In the teahouses one could hear the most absurd stories," Lao She writes of the scene set in 1898, "such as how a in a certain place a huge spider had turned into a demon and was then struck by lightning. One could also come in contact with the strangest of views; for example, that foreign troops could be prevented from landing by building a Great Wall along the sea coast." Lao She follows the lives of Wang and his customers. Ambivalently Wang and his friends demonstate the failure of their lives towards the end by a mock funeral, welcoming the new society. The teahouse is requisitioned as a club and Wang is offered a job as doorman - however, he has already hanged himself. - The Beijing People's Art Theatre performed the play in 1980 in West Germany and France during the three-hundredth anniversary of the Comédie-Française.

For further reading: Lao She, China's Master Storyteller by Britt Towery, et al (1999); Encyclopedia of World Literature in the 20th Century, vol. 3, ed. by Steven R. Serafin (1999); Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature (1995); Fictional Realism in Twentieth Century China: Mao Dun, Lao She, Shen Congwen by T. Wang (1992); McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Drama, ed. by Stanley Hochman (1984); Two Writers and the Cultural Revolution: Lao She and Chen Jo-hsi, ed. by G.Kao (1980); Lao She and the Chinese Revolution by R. Vohra (1974); The Evolution of a Modern Chinese Writer: An Analysis of Lao She's Fiction, with Biographical and Bibliographical Appendices by Z. Slupski (1966)
Selected works:


CHAO TZU-YÜEH, 1927
LAO CHANG TI CHÊ-HSÜEH, 1928
ERH MA, 1929 - Ma and Son
HSIAO-P'O THE SHENG-JIH, 1931
MAO CH'ENG CHI, 1932 - Cat Country (trans. by William A. Lyell)
LI HUN, 1933 - The Quest for Love of Lao Lee
MAO-CH'ENG CHI, 1933
KAN-CHI, 1934
NIU T'IE-TZ'U CHUAN, 1934 - Heavensent (trans. by Xiong Deni)
YING-HAI-CHI,1935
LUOTUO XIANGZI / LO-TO HSIANG TZU, 1936 - Rickshaw Boy / Camel Xiangzi (1945, unauthorized and with a happy ending; Rickshaw: the novel Lo-to Hsiang Tzu, trans. by Jean M. James) - Riksapoika (suom., tekijänimellä Lau Shaw) - film 1982, dir. by Zifeng Ling, starring Fengyi Zhang, Gaowa Siqin
KO-TSAO-CHI, 1936
LO-T'O HSIANG-TZU, 1938
LAONIU P'O-CH'E, 1939
CHIEN-PEI 'PIEN, 1940
KUO-CHIA SHIH-SHANG, 1940 (with Sung Chih-ti)
HUO-CH'E-CHI, 1941
WEN PO-SHIH, 1941
KUEI-CH-Ü-LAI HSI, 1943
TS'AN-WU, 1943
MIEN-TZU WEN-T'I, 1943
CHUNG-LIEH T'U, 1943
WANG-CHIA CHEN, 1943
CHANG TZU-CHUNG, 1943
TA-TI LUNG-SHE, 1943
T'AU-LI CH'UN-FENG, 1943
SHEI NSIEN TAO-LE CH'UNG'ING, 1943
HUOTSANG, 1944
Ricshaw Boy, 1945 (unauthorized translation with happy ending)
TUNG-HAI PA-SHAN-CHI, 1946
SSU-SHIH T'UNG-T'ANG, 1946-51 - The Yellow Storm (trilogy); first part HUANG-HUO (1946), second part T'OU-SHENG (1946), third part CHI-HUANG (1950-51)
WEI-SHEN-CHI, 1947
FANG CHEN-CHU, 1950
LUNG-HSÜ-KOU, 1953 - Dragon Beard Ditch - film 1952, dir. by Xian Qun, starring Yu Shizhi, Yu Lan, Zhang Fa
PIEN MI-HSIN, 1951
The Drum Singers, 1952 - film: Folk Artists, a.k.a. The Street Players (Gushu Yiren), 1987, dir. by Tian Zhuangzhuang
CH-UN-HUA CH'IU-SHIH, 1953
HO KUNG-JEN T'UNG-CHIH-MEN T'AN HSIEH-TSO, 1954
WU-MING KAO-TI YU-LE MING, 1954
SHIH-WU KUAN, 1956
HSI-WANG CH'ANG-AN, 1956
CHAGUAN, 1957 - Teahouse (trans. by John Howard-Gibbon) - film 1982, dir. by Xie Tian
FUHSING-CHI, 1958
HUNG TA-YÜ AN, 1958
CH'ÜAN-CHIA FU, 1959
NÜ-TIEN-YÜAN, 1959
PAO-CH'UAN, 1961
HO CHU P'EI, 1962
SHEN JUAN, 1963 (play, Divine Fists)
CH'U-K-'OU CH'ENG-CHANG, 1964
Two Writers and the Cultural Revolution: Lao She and Chen Jo-hsi, 1980
Crescent Moon and Other Stories, 1985
Mr. Ma & Son: A Sojourn in London, 1991
Blades of Grass: The Stories of Lao She, 1999 (trans. by William A. Lyell and Sarah Wei-ming Chen)

Lao Shê (1899-1966) - also Lao She - pseudonym of Shu Sheyou, original name Shu Qingchun



Chinese playwright and author of humorous, satiric novels and short stories. Lao She is perhaps best known for his story LO-T'O HSIANG-TZU (1936, Rickshaw), a twentieth-century classic. An unauthorized and bowdlerized English translation, Rickshaw Boy, with a happy ending, appeared in 1945 and became a U.S. bestseller.

"The person we want to introduce is Hsing Tzu, not Camel Hsiang Tzu, because "Camel is only a nickname. We'll just say Hsiang Tzu for now, having indicated that there is a connection between Camel and Hsiang Tzu." (from Rickshaw)
Shu Quingchun (Lao She) was born Shu She-yü of Manchu descent in Beijing. His father, who was a guard soldier, died in a street battle during the 1900 Boxer uprising. To support her family and Lao Shê's private tutoring, his mother did laundry. "During my childhood," Lao She has later said, "I didn't need to hear stories about evil ogres eating children and so forth; the foreign devils my mother told me about were more barbaric and cruel than any fairy tale ogre with a huge mouth and great fangs. And fairy tales are only fairy tales, whereas my mother's stories were 100 percent factual, and they directly affected our whole family." (Lao Shê in Modern Chinese Writers, ed. by Helmut Martin and Jeffrey Kinkley, 1992)

Fatherless since early childhood, Lao She worked his way through Peking Teacher's College. After graduation he supported himself and his mother through a series of teaching and administrative posts. He served as a principal of an elementary school at the age of 17, and later he was a district supervisor. Lao She spent the years from 1924 to 1929 in London, where he taught Chinese at the School of Oriental and African Studies. By reading amongst other things the novels of Charles Dickens, Lao She improved his English, and decided to start his first novel.

In 1930 Lao She returned to China and continued to write and teach Chinese at Qilu and Shadong Universities. MAO CH'ENG CHI (1933, Cat Country) was a bitter satire about Chinese society. In NIU T'IEN-TZ'U CHUAN (1934, Heavensent), partly modelled on Fielding's Tom Jones, Lao She turned again to humor. He reversed his early individualist theme and stressed the futility of the individual's struggle against society as a whole. In Rickshaw Boy Lao She traces the degradation and ruin of an industrious Peking rickshaw puller, a peasant drawn to the city. To earn his living, he pulls a rented rickshaw from dawn till dark, enjoys briefly the status of owner-operator, and finally dies on a snowy night. Evan King's translation published in 1945 invented new characters and changed the ending.

The outbreak of the second Sino-Japanese War (1937-45) radically altered Lao She's views. Between the years 1937 and 1945 he wrote a number of plays, worked as a propagandist, and headed the All-China Anti-Japanese Writers Federation. After World War II Lao She published a gigantic novel in three parts, SSU-SHIH T'UNG-T'ANG (abridged translation The Yellow Storm). It dealt with life in Peking during the Japanese occupation of Manchuria. Between the years 1946 and 1949 Lao She lived in the United States on a cultural grant at the invitation of the Department of State. When the People's Republic was established in 1949, Lao She returned to China.

Among Lao Shê's most famous stories is 'Crescent Moon', written in the early stage of his creative life. It depicts the miserable life of a mother and daughter and their deterioration into prostitution. "I used to picture an ideal life, and it would be like a dream," the daughter thinks. "But then, as cruel reality again closed in on me, the dream would quickly pass, and I would feel worse than ever. This world is no dream - it's a living hell. " (from 'Crescent Moon')

Lao She was a member of the Cultural and Educational Committee in the Government Administration Council, a deputy to the National People's Congress, a member of the Standing Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, vice-chairman of the All-China Federation of Literature and Art and vice-chairman of the Union of Chinese Writers as well as chairman of the Beijing Federation of Literature and Art. He was named a 'People's Artist' and a 'Great Master of Language'. His plays, such as LUNG HSÜ-KOU (1951, Dragon Beard Ditch), became ideologically didactic, and did not reach the level of his former work. SHEN JUAN written in 1960, on the sixtieth anniversary of the Boxer uprising, was a four-act play about the Boxers. Lao She emphasized the anti-imperialistic zeal of the Boxers and the burning and killing carried out by the allied powers. During the Cultural Revolution, Lao She was publicly denounced and criticized, as a number of other writers and intellectuals. On October 24, 1966, Lao She was murdered or driven to suicide. His last novel, The Drum Singers (1952), was first published in English in the United States.

Since the fall of Chiang Ch'ing, guiding hand of the Cultural Revolution, in 1971, Lao She's works have been republished. In 1979, he was posthumously "rehabilitated" by the Communist Party. Several of his stories have been made into films, including This Life of Mine (1950, dir. by Shi Hui), Dragon Beard Ditch (1952, dir. by Xian Qun), Rickshaw Boy (1982, dir. by Zifeng Ling), The Teahouse (1982, dir. by Xie Tian), The Crescent Moon (1986, dir. by Huo Zhuang), The Drum Singers (1987, dir. by Tian Zhuangzhuang ), and The Divorce. Tian Zhuangzhuang's film version of The Drum Singers (1987) was mostly shot on location in Sichuan.

Lao She's most frequently performed plays is CHAGUAN (Teahouse), which was written in 1957. The events are set in the Beijing teahouse of Wang Lifa during three different periods: 1898 under the empire, the 1910s under the warlords and around 1945 after WW II. "In the teahouses one could hear the most absurd stories," Lao She writes of the scene set in 1898, "such as how a in a certain place a huge spider had turned into a demon and was then struck by lightning. One could also come in contact with the strangest of views; for example, that foreign troops could be prevented from landing by building a Great Wall along the sea coast." Lao She follows the lives of Wang and his customers. Ambivalently Wang and his friends demonstate the failure of their lives towards the end by a mock funeral, welcoming the new society. The teahouse is requisitioned as a club and Wang is offered a job as doorman - however, he has already hanged himself. - The Beijing People's Art Theatre performed the play in 1980 in West Germany and France during the three-hundredth anniversary of the Comédie-Française.

For further reading: Lao She, China's Master Storyteller by Britt Towery, et al (1999); Encyclopedia of World Literature in the 20th Century, vol. 3, ed. by Steven R. Serafin (1999); Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature (1995); Fictional Realism in Twentieth Century China: Mao Dun, Lao She, Shen Congwen by T. Wang (1992); McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Drama, ed. by Stanley Hochman (1984); Two Writers and the Cultural Revolution: Lao She and Chen Jo-hsi, ed. by G.Kao (1980); Lao She and the Chinese Revolution by R. Vohra (1974); The Evolution of a Modern Chinese Writer: An Analysis of Lao She's Fiction, with Biographical and Bibliographical Appendices by Z. Slupski (1966)
Selected works:



CHAO TZU-YÜEH, 1927
LAO CHANG TI CHÊ-HSÜEH, 1928
ERH MA, 1929 - Ma and Son
HSIAO-P'O THE SHENG-JIH, 1931
MAO CH'ENG CHI, 1932 - Cat Country (trans. by William A. Lyell)
LI HUN, 1933 - The Quest for Love of Lao Lee
MAO-CH'ENG CHI, 1933
KAN-CHI, 1934
NIU T'IE-TZ'U CHUAN, 1934 - Heavensent (trans. by Xiong Deni)
YING-HAI-CHI,1935
LUOTUO XIANGZI / LO-TO HSIANG TZU, 1936 - Rickshaw Boy / Camel Xiangzi (1945, unauthorized and with a happy ending; Rickshaw: the novel Lo-to Hsiang Tzu, trans. by Jean M. James) - Riksapoika (suom., tekijänimellä Lau Shaw) - film 1982, dir. by Zifeng Ling, starring Fengyi Zhang, Gaowa Siqin
KO-TSAO-CHI, 1936
LO-T'O HSIANG-TZU, 1938
LAONIU P'O-CH'E, 1939
CHIEN-PEI 'PIEN, 1940
KUO-CHIA SHIH-SHANG, 1940 (with Sung Chih-ti)
HUO-CH'E-CHI, 1941
WEN PO-SHIH, 1941
KUEI-CH-Ü-LAI HSI, 1943
TS'AN-WU, 1943
MIEN-TZU WEN-T'I, 1943
CHUNG-LIEH T'U, 1943
WANG-CHIA CHEN, 1943
CHANG TZU-CHUNG, 1943
TA-TI LUNG-SHE, 1943
T'AU-LI CH'UN-FENG, 1943
SHEI NSIEN TAO-LE CH'UNG'ING, 1943
HUOTSANG, 1944
Ricshaw Boy, 1945 (unauthorized translation with happy ending)
TUNG-HAI PA-SHAN-CHI, 1946
SSU-SHIH T'UNG-T'ANG, 1946-51 - The Yellow Storm (trilogy); first part HUANG-HUO (1946), second part T'OU-SHENG (1946), third part CHI-HUANG (1950-51)
WEI-SHEN-CHI, 1947
FANG CHEN-CHU, 1950
LUNG-HSÜ-KOU, 1953 - Dragon Beard Ditch - film 1952, dir. by Xian Qun, starring Yu Shizhi, Yu Lan, Zhang Fa
PIEN MI-HSIN, 1951
The Drum Singers, 1952 - film: Folk Artists, a.k.a. The Street Players (Gushu Yiren), 1987, dir. by Tian Zhuangzhuang
CH-UN-HUA CH'IU-SHIH, 1953
HO KUNG-JEN T'UNG-CHIH-MEN T'AN HSIEH-TSO, 1954
WU-MING KAO-TI YU-LE MING, 1954
SHIH-WU KUAN, 1956
HSI-WANG CH'ANG-AN, 1956
CHAGUAN, 1957 - Teahouse (trans. by John Howard-Gibbon) - film 1982, dir. by Xie Tian
FUHSING-CHI, 1958
HUNG TA-YÜ AN, 1958
CH'ÜAN-CHIA FU, 1959
NÜ-TIEN-YÜAN, 1959
PAO-CH'UAN, 1961
HO CHU P'EI, 1962
SHEN JUAN, 1963 (play, Divine Fists)
CH'U-K-'OU CH'ENG-CHANG, 1964
Two Writers and the Cultural Revolution: Lao She and Chen Jo-hsi, 1980
Crescent Moon and Other Stories, 1985
Mr. Ma & Son: A Sojourn in London, 1991
Blades of Grass: The Stories of Lao She, 1999 (trans. by William A. Lyell and Sarah Wei-ming Chen)

Lao She (Chinese: 老舍; Pinyin: Lǎo Shě, February 3, 1899 – August 24, 1966) was a noted Chinese writer. A novelist and dramatist, he was one of the most significant figures of 20th century Chinese literature, and is perhaps best known for his novel Camel Xiangzi or Rickshaw Boy (骆驼祥子) and the play Teahouse (茶馆). He was of Manchu ethnicity.

He was born Shū Qìngchūn (舒庆春) in Beijing, to a poor family of the Sūmuru clan belonging to the Red Banner. In 1913, he was admitted to the Beijing Normal Third High School (currently Beijing Third High School), but had to leave after several months because of financial difficulties. In the same year, he was accepted into the Beijing Institute for Education, where he graduated in 1918.

Between 1918 and 1924 he was involved as administrator and faculty member at a number of primary and secondary schools in Beijing and Tianjin. He was highly influenced by the May Fourth Movement (1919). He stated, "[The] May Fourth [Movement] gave me a new spirit and a new literary language. I am grateful to [The] May Fourth [Movement], as it allowed me to become a writer."

He went on to serve as lecturer in the Chinese section of the (then) School of Oriental Studies (now the School of Oriental and African Studies) at the University of London from 1924 to 1929. During his time in London, he absorbed a great deal of English literature and began his own writing. His later novel 二马 (Ma and Son) drew on these experiences.

In the summer of 1929, he left Britain for Singapore, teaching at the Chinese High School (华侨中学). Between his return to China in the spring of 1930 until 1937, he taught at several universities, including Cheeloo University (齐鲁大学) and Shandong University (Qingdao).

His first important novel, Luotuo Xiangzi (骆驼祥子, "Camel Xiangzi," widely known in the West as "Rickshaw Boy" or "Rickshaw"), was published in 1936. It describes the tragic life of a rickshaw puller in Beijing of the 1920s and is considered to be a classic of modern Chinese literature. The English version Rickshaw Boy became a US bestseller in 1945; it was an unauthorized translation that added a bowdlerized happy ending to the story. In 1982, the original version was made into a film of the same title.

During World War II, Lao She also made noted contributions as a leader of anti-Japanese writers in China. He became the vice chairman of the Union of Writers after 1949. After the establishment of the PRC, his writing fell largely in line with state ideology, whereas before it had been broadly critical and satirical.

Like thousands of other intellectuals in China, he experienced mistreatment in the Cultural Revolution of the mid-1960s. Red Guards of the Cultural Revolution had attacked him as a counterrevolutionary. They paraded him through the streets and beat him in public. Greatly humiliated both mentally and physically, he committed suicide by drowning himself in a Beijing lake in 1966. His relatives were accused of implication in his "crimes" but continued to rescue his manuscripts after his death, hiding them in coal piles and a chimney and moving them from house to house.

His other important works include Si Shi Tong Tang (四世同堂, "Four Generations under One Roof" 1944–1950), a novel describing the life of the Chinese people during the Japanese Occupation; Cat Country (猫城记) a satire which is sometimes seen as the first important Chinese science fiction novel, Cha Guan (茶馆, "Teahouse"), a play written in 1957; and Lao Zhang de Zhexue (老张的哲学, "The Philosophy of Old Zhang"), his first published novel, written in London (1926).

The Laoshe Tea House (老舍茶馆), a popular tourist attraction in Beijing that opened in 1988 and features regular performances of traditional music, is named for Lao She.[1]

He had four children, one son and three daughters.


老舍的有关资料
老舍(1899年2月3日—1966年8月24日),男,原名舒庆春,字舍予,另有笔名絜青、鸿来、非我等。因为老舍生于阴历立春,父母为他取名“庆春”,大概含有庆贺春来、前景美好之意。上学后,自己更名为舒舍予,含有“舍弃自我”,亦即“忘我”的意思。北京满族正红旗人。中国现代小说家、作家,语言大师...

关于老舍的简介
老舍原名舒庆春,字舍予,另有笔名絜青、鸿来、非我等。1899年老舍生于北京。父亲是一名满族的护军,阵亡在八国联军攻打北京城的战争中。老舍是中国现代小说家、作家,语言大师、人民艺术家,新中国第一位获得“人民艺术家”称号的作家。代表作有《骆驼祥子》,《四世同堂》,剧本《茶馆》。老舍的作品...

关于老舍(一个作者)的资料
老舍(1899年2月3日—1966年8月24日),原名舒庆春,字舍予,另有笔名絜青、鸿来、非我等。中国现代小说家、作家,语言大师、人民艺术家,新中国第一位获得“人民艺术家”称号的作家。代表作有《骆驼祥子》、《四世同堂》、剧本《茶馆》。老舍的一生,总是忘我地工作,他是文艺界当之无愧的“劳动...

关于老舍生平的资料
老舍(1899年2月3日-1966年8月24日),原名舒庆春,字舍予,是现代著名作家和人民艺术家,被誉为“语言大师”。他出生于北京,父亲是满族护军,在北京被八国联军攻破时阵亡。老舍的笔名最初用于小说《老张的哲学》,他还使用过舍予、絜青、絜予、非我、鸿来等笔名。他的职业生涯包括担任小学校长...

关于老舍的背景资料?
关于老舍的背景资料老舍(1899年2月3日-1966年8月24日),本名舒庆春,字舍予,北京满族正红旗人,原姓舒舒觉罗氏,中国现代著名小说家、文学家、戏剧家。文革期间受到迫害,1966年8月24日深夜,老舍含冤自沉于北京西北的太平湖畔,终年67岁。夫人胡絜青(1905-2001)。人生经历 父亲是一名满族的护军,...

小学阶段(1~6)年级都学过关于老舍先生的哪些文章?
1、《猫》冀教版四年级下册 ,该文描述的是老舍的家猫,其形象在老舍的笔下栩栩如生。2、《我们家的猫》冀教版四年级下册,作者观察精细独道、内容充实饱满、语言生动有趣,在语言表达上具有独道的魅力。他生动细致,形象逼真地描述了猫长大后的古怪性格和小时候的淘气可爱。特别是写猫的古怪性格用...

简要的介绍老舍
老舍(1899年2月3日—1966年8月24日),原名舒庆春,字舍予,另有笔名絜青、鸿来、非我等。因为老舍生于阴历立春,父母为他取名“庆春”,大概含有庆贺春来、前景美好之意。上学后,自己更名为舒舍予,含有“舍弃自我”,亦即“忘我”的意思。北京满族正红旗人。中国现代小说家、作家,语言大师、人民...

老舍的资料(除了个人简介和代表作品外)
50年代前半期,作家对有些作品(如《骆驼祥子》、《离婚》),作了修改,形成不同的版本。从70年代末期起,搜集整理老舍作品的工作,引起普遍注意,陆续出版了《老舍诗选》(1980)、《老舍小说集外集》(1982)、《老舍论创作》(1980)、《老舍论剧》(1981)、《老舍曲艺文选》(1982)以及《老舍文艺评论集》(1982)等等,...

老舍的资料是哪些?
老舍(原名舒庆春,1899年2月3日-1966年8月24日),字舍予,北京满族正红旗人,毕业于北京师范学院,中国现代小说家、作家、语言大师、人民艺术家,新中国第一位获得“人民艺术家”称号的作家。 他总是忘我地工作,是文艺界当之无愧的“劳动模范”,终生对满清一代的腐朽统治持批判态度。1966年8月24...

课文养花的资料
——冰心《又想起了老舍先生》����京味儿老舍——��鲁迅说过老舍“油滑”,叫我这半吊子北京人看,这是南方人对北京话的偏见,那不是老舍油滑,而是北京人就这么说话。老舍的作品有时给人感觉软,绕半天圈子不切题,正是有些失之厚道,舍不得...

宁南县17382674096: 请问跟急需一些关于老舍的资料,一些用英语写的短句,很急啊 -
山秀多维: 老舍(1899年2月3日—1966年8月24日),原名舒庆春,另有笔名絜青、鸿来、非我等,字舍予.因为老舍生于阴历立春,父母为他取名“庆春”,大概含有庆贺春来、前景美好之意.上学后,自己更名为舒舍予,含有“舍弃自我”,亦即“忘我”的意思.信仰基督教,北京满族正红旗人.中国现代小说家、著名作家,杰出的语言大师、人民艺术家,新中国第一位获得“人民艺术家”称号的作家.代表作有《骆驼祥子》、《四世同堂》、剧本《茶馆》.老舍的一生,总是忘我地工作,他是文艺界当之无愧的“劳动模范”.1966年,由于受到文革中恶毒的攻击和迫害,老舍被逼无奈之下含冤自沉于北京太平湖.

宁南县17382674096: 英文 老舍的资料(100个单词以内) -
山秀多维: Lao Shê (1899-1966) - also Lao She - pseudonym of Shu Sheyou, original name Shu Qingchun. Chinese playwright and author of humorous, satiric novels and short stories.Shu Quingchun (Lao She) was born Shu She-yü of Manchu descent in ...

宁南县17382674096: 急急急急 老舍的英文资料
山秀多维: Chinese playwright and author of humorous, satiric novels and short stories. Lao She is perhaps best known for his story LO-T'O HSIANG-TZU (1936, Rickshaw), a twentieth-century classic. An unauthorized and bowdlerized English translation, ...

宁南县17382674096: 老舍英文简介加中文翻译 -
山秀多维: 英文: ShuQingChun, word to modern Chinese novelist, shebna, writers, playwright. Lao she's life, always devote themselves to the job, he is worthy of the great "model worker" and published a large number of literary works, affect later won the ...

宁南县17382674096: 老舍的相关简介的英文翻译老舍出生于1899年2月3日1966年8月23日老舍去世老舍出生于北京西城小羊圈胡同老舍是作家这些的翻译~~~如果方便的话告诉我... -
山秀多维:[答案] Lao she was born on February 3, 1899 August 23, 1966 Lao she died Lao she was born in Beijing xicheng small fold alley Lao she is a writer

宁南县17382674096: 关于老舍的英语作文短一点40个单词就够了 -
山秀多维:[答案] Lao She's Teahouse This is one exciting cultural place at Qianmen off the main tourist itinerary.It is named after the drama Teahouse by Chinese author,Lao She.Although an attempt to give a taste of ...

宁南县17382674096: 用英语介绍老舍的《骆驼祥子》(我没有积分,就这么多) -
山秀多维:[答案] Novel by the bitterness of an old story of rickshaw pullers, described how one of the old society, integrity, good strong, kind, self-reliant foreign driver of the soul from the body to be destroyed i...

宁南县17382674096: 书面表达 用英语介绍老舍的《茶馆》.字数60 - 80. - ______________ --
山秀多维:[答案] Lao She wrote Teahouse in 1957.The story happened in 1898 during the Qing Dynasty.It continued in 1916, and finally, it brought the audience to the end of the Anti-Japanese War in 1945.It took place in a teahouse in old Beijing and it told us the story ...

宁南县17382674096: 急求用英文概括介绍老舍一部作品~100个单词左右 -
山秀多维:[答案] Teahouse By She Lao This is one of the famous dramas by Lao She.The drama is set in a typical,old Beijing teahouse and follows the lives of the owner and his customers through three stages in modern Chinese history.The play spans fifty years and has...

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