Lu Xun (1881-1936) was a Chinese writer, thinker and revolutionary. He
was born on September 5, 1881 in Shaoxing in east China's Zhejiang Province.
Lu Xun went to Japan in 1902 to study medical science. He gave up on what he
had learned and instead taught in Hangzhou and Shaoxing after he came back from
Japan in 1909. He worked in the Nanjing interim government after the Revolution
of 1911 which was led by Dr. Sun Yat-sen and overthrew the Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911). He then worked in the Ministry of Education in Beijing.
In May 1918 Lu Xun began to write and publish novels like Diary of a Madman,
The True Story of Ah Q and Kong Yiji. In 920 he started to teach in the Peking
University and the Peking Senior Normal School.
In 1927 he settled in Shanghai. During this period he published nine
collections of essays and a collection of short stories entitled Old Tales
Retold. He also edited and translated foreign works on art and literature.
In 1930 Lu Xun set up the League of Leftist Writers which he led.
Lu Xun first lived at Jingyunli in Hengbin Road of Hongkou District. He moved
on to No. 9 New Continental Village, Shanyin Road. This was Lu's last residence
in Shanghai. The red brick and tile house is a three-story building with a floor
space of 222.72 square meters.
The front area of the first floor is a reception room and the back a
dining room. The second floor was Lu's bedroom and study. Lu's personal
belongings like his bed, chest of drawers, tea table, two cane chairs, mirror
and table are all placed where they were during his life. A clock on the table
reads 5.25 PM showing the time when Lu Xun passed away on October 19, 1936. The
third floor was occupied by his son.
When Lu Xun lived in Jingyunli he frequently went to a Japanese Uchiyama
bookstore and made friends with the owner, Kanza Uchiyama. Many Chinese and
foreigners in cultural circles gathered there and the bookstore became one of
the major venues for cultural exchanges between China and foreign countries.
Lu also had very friendly relationships with Qu Qiubai (1899-1935), one of
the leaders of the Communist Party of China in its early years. Lu spent his
last days translating Qu's Collected Narrations Written at Sea (Haishang Shulin)
after the author was killed by the Koumintang government on June 18, 1935. He
was seriously ill and weighed only 37 kilograms. On October 19, 1936, he died at
home, aged 56.
Location: No.9 of 132 Shanyin Road, Hongkou District
Entry ticket: RMB
8
Opening time: 9:00 AM ¨C 4:00 PM
Tel: 8006200888/021-53020661
How to
get there: Bus No.21, 139, 47, 70, 97 and 23