现代中国 人物列表
余光中 Yu Guangzhong(现代中国)佚名 Yi Ming(现代中国)李叔同 Li Shutong(现代中国)
赵超 Zhao Chao(现代中国)钱穆 Qian Mu(现代中国)柏杨 Bai Yang(现代中国)
岳南 Yue Na(现代中国)易中天 Yi Zhongtian(现代中国)林语堂 Lin Yutang(现代中国)
赵柏田 Zhao Baitian(现代中国)陈舜臣 Chin Shunshin(现代中国)子金山 Zi Jinshan(现代中国)
王利器 Wang Liqi(现代中国)马非百 Ma Feibai(现代中国)落花散人 La Huasanren(现代中国)
朱谦之 Zhu Qianzhi(现代中国)王明 Wang Ming(现代中国)马叙伦 Ma Xulun(现代中国)
刘武 Liu Wu(现代中国)欧阳竞无 Ouyang Jingmo(现代中国)道源法师 Dao Yuanfashi(现代中国)
广化法师 An Huafashi(现代中国)袁闾琨 Yuan Lvkun(现代中国)岑仲勉 Cen Zhongmian(现代中国)
夏岚馨 Xia Lanxin(现代中国)胡适 Hu Shi(现代中国)王蒙 Wang Meng(现代中国)
梅朝荣 Mei Chaorong(现代中国)李勇 Li Yong(现代中国)成君忆 Cheng Junyi(现代中国)
刘绪义 Liu Xuyi(现代中国)张海鸥 Zhang Haiou(现代中国)余秋雨 Yu Qiuyu(现代中国)
曾仕强 Ceng Shijiang(现代中国)张晓杰 Zhang Xiaojie(现代中国)于丹 Yu Dan(现代中国)
孔健 Kong Jian(现代中国)王立群 Wang Liqun(现代中国)李零 Li Ling(现代中国)
徐晋如 Xu Jinru(现代中国)杨昊鸥 Yang Haoou(现代中国)马骏 Ma Jun(现代中国)
赵林 Zhao Lin(现代中国)孔庆东 Kong Qingdong(现代中国)方尔加 Fang Erjia(现代中国)
钱文忠 Qian Wenzhong(现代中国)姚淦铭 Yao Ganming(现代中国)李刚田 Li Gangtian(现代中国)
马明达 Ma Mingda(现代中国)杨泓 Yang Hong(现代中国)钱绍武 Qian Shaowu(现代中国)
崔乐泉 Cui Lequan(现代中国)赵世民 Zhao Shimin(现代中国)黄朴民 Huang Piaomin(现代中国)
颜世安 Yan Shian(现代中国)止庵 Zhi An(现代中国)冯时 Feng Shi(现代中国)
白云翔 Bai Yunxiang(现代中国)南怀瑾 Na Huaijin(现代中国)刘德江 Liu Dejiang(现代中国)
冰心 Bingxin
现代中国  (1900年10月5日1999年2月28日)
姓:
名: 婉莹

冰心(1900年10月5日-1999年2月28日),本名谢婉莹,女,福建长乐人,中国现代作家。笔名冰心取自“一片冰心在玉壶”。
冰心(1900年10月5日-1999年2月28日),女,原名谢婉莹,福建省福州市长乐区人 ,中国民主促进会民进)成员。   中国诗人,现代作家、翻译家、儿童文学作家、社会活动家散文家。笔名冰心取自“一片冰心在玉壶”。  
1919年8月的《晨报》上,冰心发表了第一篇散文《二十一日听审的感想》和第一篇小说《两个家庭》。1923年出国留学前后,开始陆续发表总名为《寄小读者》的通讯散文,成为中国儿童文学的奠基之作。在日本被东京大学聘为第一位外籍女讲师,讲授“中国新文学”课程,于1951年返回中国。
1999年2月28日21时12分冰心在北京医院逝世,享年99岁,被称为"世纪老人"。  


Xie Wanying (Chinese謝婉瑩; October 5, 1900 – February 28, 1999), better known by her pen name Bing Xin (Chinese冰心) or Xie Bingxin, was one of the most prolific Chinese writers of the 20th century. Many of her works were written for young readers. She was the chairperson of the China Federation of Literary and Art Circles. Her pen name Bing Xin (literally "Ice Heart") carries the meaning of a morally pure heart, and is taken from a line in a Tang Dynasty poem by Wang Changling.

Life

Bing Xin was born in FuzhouFujian, but moved to Shanghai with her family when she was seven months old, and later moved yet again to the coastal port city of YantaiShandong, when she was four. Such a move had a crucial influence on Bing Xin's personality and philosophy of love and beauty, as the vastness and beauty of the sea greatly expanded and refined young Bing Xin's mind and heart. It was also in Yantai Bing Xin first began to read the classics of Chinese literature, such as Romance of the Three Kingdoms and Water Margin, when she was just seven.

In 1913, Bing Xin moved to Beijing. The May Fourth Movement in 1919 inspired and elevated Bing Xin's patriotism to new high levels, starting her writing career as she wrote for a school newspaper at Yanjing University where she was enrolled as a student and published her first novel. While at Yanjing in 1921, Bing Xin was baptized a Christian, but was throughout her life generally indifferent to Christian rituals.

Bing Xin graduated from Yanjing University in 1923 with a bachelor's degree, and went to the United States to study at Wellesley College, earning a master's degree at Wellesley in literature in 1926. She then returned to Yanjing University to teach until 1936.

In 1929, she married Wu Wenzao, an anthropologist and her good friend when they were studying in the United States. Together, Bing Xin and her husband visited different intellectual circles around the world, communicating with other intellectuals such as Virginia Woolf.

In 1940, Bing Xin was elected a member of the National Senate.

Later in her life, Bing Xin taught in Japan for a short period and stimulated more cultural communications between China and the other parts of the world as a traveling Chinese writer. In literature, Bing Xin founded the "Bing Xin Style" as a new literary style. She contributed a lot to children's literature in China (her writings were even incorporated into children's textbooks), and also undertook various translation tasks, including the translation of the works of Indian literary figure Rabindranath Tagore.

Bing Xin's literary career was prolific and productive. She wrote a wide range of works—prose, poetry, novels, reflections, etc. Her career spanned more than seven decades in length, from 1919 to the 1990s.

Legacy

Selected works

  • Jimo (寂寞, Loneliness) (1922)
  • Chaoren (超人, Superhuman) (1923)
  • Fanxing (繁星, A Myriad of Stars) (1923)
  • Chunshui (春水, Spring Water) (1923)
  • Liu yi jie (六一姐, Six-one sister) (1924)
  • Ji xiao duzhe (寄小讀者, To Young Readers) (1926)
  • Nangui (南歸, Homeward South) (1931)
  • Bing Xin Quanji (冰心全集, The Collected Works of Bing Xin) (1932–1933)
  • Yinghua zan (櫻花讚, Ode to Sakura)
  • Wo men zheli meiyou dongtian (我們這裡沒有冬天, No Winter in My Hometown) (1974)
  • Wo de guxiang (我的故鄉, My Home) (1983)
  • Guanyu nuren (關於女人, About Females) (1999)

Works available in English

  • The PhotographBeijingChinese Literature Press (1992)
  • Spring WatersPeking, (1929)
  • The Little Orange Lamp (小橘灯, 1957), translated by Gong Shifen, Renditions, Autumn 1989, pp. 130–132.

References

  1. ^ "Bingxin | Chinese author"Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2017-10-19.
  2. ^ Li Daonan (May 17, 2019). "Bing Xin's Christian Faith and Real Life"China Christian Daily.
  3. ^ James Z. Gao: Historical Dictionary of Modern China (1800-1949)
  4. ^ Bing Xin Museum Receives Author's Household Estate, CCTV, 2004-03-24, archived from the original on 2011-07-07, retrieved 2010-04-28
  5. ^ "冰心儿童文学新作奖" [Bing Xin Children's Literature Award]. Baidu Baike.
  6. ^ Abrahamsen, Eric. "The Bing Xin Children's Literature Award"Paper Republic. Archived from the original on 2016-08-27. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  7. ^ "List of Bing Xin Award Winning New Works of Children's Literature 2005-2011 2005年-2011年冰心儿童文学新作奖获奖篇目"Chinese-forums.com.
  8. ^ Bing Xin. "The Little Orange Lamp" (PDF). Translated by Gong Shifen.
  9. ^ "chinese-shortstories.com"www.chinese-shortstories.com.
  10. ^ "Bing Xin and The Little Orange Lantern". 29 December 2016.

Further reading

Portrait

External links


    

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