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Yu Wen, better known by his Yu Dafu (December 7, 1896 – September 17, 1945) was a modern Chinese short story writer and . He was one of the new literary group initiators, and this new literary group was named the . His literary masterpieces include Chenlun (沈淪, Sinking), Chunfeng chenzui de wanshang (春風沈醉的晚上, Intoxicating Spring Nights), Guoqu (過去, The Past), Chuben (出奔, Flight) and so on. Yu Dafu's literary works' writing style and main themes profoundly influenced a group of young writers and formed a spectacular romantic trend in Chinese literature in the 1920s and 1930s. He died in the Japanese-occupied Dutch East Indies, likely executed.


Early years
Yu was born in Fuyang, province. His father died when he was three, leaving the family poverty-stricken and destitute. He received a number of scholarships through the Chinese government and went on to receive a traditional Chinese education in . Chronologically he studied in Jiangxing Middle School (before he came to Hangzhou), Hangzhou Middle School, Hangchow Presbyterian College (育英学堂).

In 1912, he entered Hangchow University (later its major part merged into Zhejiang University) preparatory through examination. He was there only for a short period before he was expelled for participation in a student strike.

He then moved to Japan, where he studied at the Tokyo Imperial University between 1913 and 1922, where he met other Chinese intellectuals (namely, , , and ). Together, in 1921 they founded the Chuangzao she (創造社, Creation Society), which promoted vernacular and modern literature. He published one of his earlier works, the short story Chenlun (沈淪, Sinking), his most famous, while still in Japan in 1921. "Sinking" reflects a problem, which is that both China and Japan were once powerful countries in Asia, but at that time, in contrast to Japan's successful national modernization, China has not successfully achieved national modernization. Yu Dafu was ashamed of this, and he used such a story to express a sense of national shame, but in fact, this story's background does not match the facts. The work had gained immense popularity in China, shocking the world of Chinese literature with its frank dealing with sex, as well as grievances directed at the incompetence of the Chinese government at the time.

In 1922, he returned to China as a literary celebrity and worked as the editor of Creation Quarterly, editing journals and writing short stories. In 1923, after an attack of , Yu Dafu directed his attention to the welfare of the masses.

In 1927, he worked as an editor of the Hongshui literary magazine. He later came in conflict with the Chinese Communist Party and fled back to Japan.


Second Sino-Japanese War
After the start of the Second Sino-Japanese War, he returned to China and worked as a writer of anti-Japanese in . From 1938 to 1942, he worked as a literary editor for the newspaper Sin Chew Jit Poh in .

In 1942 when the Imperial Japanese Army invaded Singapore, he was forced to flee to , , Indonesia. Known under a different identity, he settled there among other and began a brewery business with the help of the locals. Later he was forced to help the as an interpreter when it was discovered that he was one of the few "locals" in the area who could speak Japanese.

On 29 August, he was arrested by the ; it is believed that the Japanese executed him shortly after the surrender of Japan.


Works
  • Yín huīsè de sǐ 银灰色的死 (1921) (Translated into English as A Silver-Grey Death, Sunny Lou Publishing, ISBN 978-1955392433, 2023)
  • Chenlun 沈淪 ("Sinking", 1921) (Translated into English as Drowning, Sunny Lou Publishing, ISBN 978-1-95539-217-4, 2021)
  • Chunfeng chenzui de wanshang 春風沈醉的晚上 Intoxicating Spring Nights (1924)
  • 日記九種 (1927)
  • Guoqu 過去 The Past (1927)
  • Chuben 出奔 Flight (1935)
  • Boundless Night (1922)


Writing style
Yu Dafu's literary works are principally in nature. There are many expressions with personal subjective colors in his works. He expresses his thoughts and feelings through the protagonist in the story. Moreover, the plot in the story is created based on his personal experience.
(1977). 9780674579118, Harvard University Press. .
Besides, his relationships with people around him are included in his works, such as his relationship with his mother and wife. It is precise because his works are derived from his own life that contemporary readers are very interested in his literary works.

Yu Dafu's sentimentalism was born in the decadent social reality of the "May 4th Movement Era". "The decadent ethos once swept through the world under the banner of aestheticism, and caring about morality was seen as something incompatible with emancipating the mind and reflecting the truth, which was 'decadent art'." Yu Dafu had an emotional resonance with this. At this time, Yu Dafu's creations were filled with gloomy and depressing "end-of-the-century emotions", but Yu Dafu's "end-of-the-century emotions" were based on the premise of resisting negative reality.

The story "Sinking" is considered one of the earliest psychological novels in modern Chinese novel history. At the same time, this story is viewed as a representative of , which satisfies one of the main literature characteristics during the May Fourth period. The protagonist in the "Sinking" quotes from Chinese literature texts, like the verses of Wang Bo 王勃 (Poet of Tang Dynasty) and Huang Zhongze 黄仲则 (Poet of Qing Dynasty). Besides, the protagonist in the story not only quotes from Chinese literature texts, but he also quotes from Western literature texts, like the poems of Wordsworth (British poet) and (German poet).

In the mid-1920s, Yu Dafu changed his writing style. His writing style changed from romantic to collectivism, especially in new women's image expression. In the "Intoxicating Spring Nights", Yu Dafu described how a female factory worker regained her self-confidence in a difficult situation. He created an image of a woman who can strengthen the protagonist.

(2026). 9781557533302, Purdue University Press. .


Main themes
Yu Dafu's work is considered by leading scholars to be iconoclastic and controversial.C T Hsia 1999: A History of Modern Chinese Fiction


Sexuality
His characters, which supposedly reflect the author are "By turns voyeur, fetishist, homosexual, masochist, and kleptomaniac." The sexually repressed heroes cannot relate to women.Wolfgang Kubin: Geschichte der chinesischen Literature: Band 7, p. 60.


Loneliness
No matter whether the Chinese literature text or the Western literature text is cited in the "Sinking" short story, the same theme is expressed: loneliness. Yu Dafu believes this is a kind of thoughts and feelings that are not understood by other people. He used this melancholy state of mind to express the degeneration of the characters in the short story. At the same time, Yu Dafu laid the foundation for the criticism and self-reflection of Chinese international students' literature.


Transnationalism
The alleged '' of Yu Dafu's works, whether in a pejorative or in an aesthetic sense (i.e.'Decadence' as an artistic movement) has been considered by Shih to be a sign of Yu Dafu's moral corruption. 2001, The Lure of the Modern: Writing Modernism in Semi-Colonial China, 1917-1937

  • Encyclopædia Britannica 2005 Ultimate Reference Suite DVD, article- "Yü Ta-fu"
  • 刘楠霞. “论郁达夫小说创作中感伤主义的语言风格.” 才智 11 (2012): 176–176. Print.


Further reading
  • Lee, Leo. (1973). The Romantic Generation of Chinese Writers. Harvard University Press.
  • Yu, Dafu. (1984). Nights of Spring Fever and Other Writings. Beijing: Panda Books.


External links

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