Gu Hua

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Gu.
Gu Hua
Native name 古华
Born Luo Hongyu (罗鸿玉)
(1942-06-20) June 20, 1942
Jiahe County, Hunan, China
Occupation Novelist
Language Chinese
Alma mater Chenzhou Institute of Agricultural Technology
Period 1962 - present
Genre Novel
Subject Country and Farmer
Notable works Furong Town
Notable awards Mao Dun Literary Prize
1982 Furong Town

Gu Hua (simplified Chinese: 古华; traditional Chinese: 古華; pinyin: Gǔ Huá; born June 20, 1942)[1] is a Chinese novelist.[1] His birth name is Luo Hongyu (羅鴻玉). His writings concern rural life in the mountainous area of southern Hunan of which he was familiar.[2] In 1988 he emigrated to Canada.[2]

Gu is best known for his 1981 novel Furong zhen (A Small Town Called Hibiscus) which won the inaugural Mao Dun Literature Prize (1982), one of the most prestigious literature prizes in China.[3][4] It was the third top-selling novel to ever win that prize, selling over 850,000 copies.[3] The novel was a rebuke of the Cultural Revolution. The novel was adapted to film in 1986 as Hibiscus Town, winning many awards including 'Best Film' of the 1987 Golden Rooster Awards.

In 1986, The New York Times reported that Gu has "risen to prominence in the last three years among some younger writers who seek to rediscover, if not necessarily to affirm, China's traditional life and values.[5] In China he has been called the Shen Congwen of the 1980s[6] and even the Thomas Hardy of Hunan," although Perry Link (professor of Chinese at the University of California) disagreed that Gu is comparable to those talents.[5]

Gu's novel Virgin Widows (Chen Neu) deals with outmoded views of chastity and adultery.[7]

Works

References

  1. 1 2 "Gu Hua" The Writers Directory 2010. Ed. Lisa Kumar. 25th ed. Vol. 1. Detroit: St. James Press, 2009. 1082. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Retrieved 17 Oct. 2012.
  2. 1 2 "Gu Hua 1942–." Encyclopedia of Modern China. Ed. David Pong. Vol. 2. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2009. 150-151. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Retrieved 17 Oct. 2012.
  3. 1 2 Guang, Yang (2011, Sep 21). "The best is yet to come, says writer Mo Yan." McClatchy - Tribune Business News.
  4. Zhu, Yuan. China Daily [New York, N.Y] 21 Nov 2000: 9. Retrieved October 17, 2012
  5. "Contemporary Chinese Literature in Translation--A Review Article", by Leo Ou-fan Lee, The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 44, No. 3 (May, 1985), pp. 561-567.
  6. Sorensen, Simon. "Virgin Windows." World Literature Today 72.1 (1998): 203. Literature Resource Center. Retrieved 17 Oct. 2012.
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