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Guo Xiaochuan

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Native name
  
郭小川

Genre
  
poetry

Ethnicity
  
Han Chinese

Died
  
1976, Anyang, China

Nationality
  
China

Role
  
Poet

Language
  
Chinese

Name
  
Guo Xiaochuan


Born
  
Guo Enda September 2, 1919 Fengshan, Rehe, Republic of China (
1919-09-02
)

Alma mater
  
Northeastern University

Education
  
Northeastern University

Guo Xiaochuan (Chinese: 郭小川; 1919-1976), original name Guo Enda, was a Chinese poet. He joined the Eighth Route Army in 1937, and began to write free-verse poems during the second Sino-Japanese War. After 1949, he worked for the Publicity Department of the Communist Party of China.

Guo's best known poems includes One and Eight (which Zhang Junzhao's film of the same name is based on), Tree Songs on Forested Areas, Forest of Sugar Cane --Gree Gauze Curtain and Gazing at the Starring Sky. Along with He Jingzhi, he is considered as one of the major practitioners of "political lyric poetry" style. But Guo's poems care more about individual perception, and some of his works were strictly criticized in China in the late 1950s.

References

Guo Xiaochuan Wikipedia


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