Shen Congwen (1902-1988), originally
named Shen Yuehuan, was born and bred in Tuojiang Town, Fenghuang County in
Hunan Province. He was a great modern Chinese writer as well as a research
scholar of historical cultural relics. More than seventy kinds of various works,
with a total of more than five million characters were published in his
lifetime. His magnum opus includes Bian Cheng (Frontier City), Chang
He (Long River) and Congwen Zizhuan (The Autobiography). He was one
of most representative writers of Chinese modern novels both at home and
abroad.
Shen was known for his extraordinary
intelligence and lasting memories even when he was young. He entered the
old-style tutorial school at the age of six, and primary school at twelve, where
he used to play truant a lot, as a result, he was sent to a local reservist
technology class right after graduation from primary school. He left hometown
when he was only 15. Following the local troops, he had been drifting along the
Yuanshui River for five years, when China was under the dark control of
warlords. Living with soldiers, peasants, handicraftsmen, and other people at
the lowest stratum of the society, he experienced in person their miserable
lives, witnessed the troops killing innocent people. However, the miserable and
frightening experience helped him understand a small part of China in his
special way, which actually built a solid foundation for his latter
creations.
His early works are heterogeneous both in
form and content. Inspired by Lu Xun's novels that took hometown life as the
subject matter, his early works were mainly about hometown. Later, he was
influenced by Feiming's (Feng Bingwen) style of writing novels in a lyric way
and developed a form of lyric novel in new literature. He persistently dug out
new subjects from his hometown and made a lot of colorful descriptions of the
soldiers of the local troops, ethnic groups in west Hunan Province and the fates
of the boatmen along Yuanshui River with strong local flavor, which, in fact,
revealed a vivid picture of the life in west Hunan for the first time. However,
these works usually attached too much importance on the peculiarity of the story
and mysterious lifestyle of the aborigines. Later he gradually turned to sing
praise of the uncouth power and intrepid temperament of the ethnic groups and
residents in the frontier areas. Meanwhile, he paid a tribute to the purity and
honesty of the people in that area, which was in sharp contrast with the modern
civilization in big cities. This revealed the author's different feelings about
different classes of the society.
Generally speaking, Shen's works were in an
effort to eulogize a healthier way of life, a more humane and spiritual
relationship between human beings, and to resume the original human nature that
is contaminated or has vanished with modern civilization. Meanwhile, in a
realistic way, he exposed the hypocrisy, vanity and the increasingly corrupt
life of the so-called Gentlemen Class in big cities. Some of the other works
also criticized the castrated notion of ancient officials. He also profoundly
portrayed the trampled and oppressed figures of peasants. All of those works
featured a strong flavor of realism. Shen was also good at describing local way
of life, and this particularly had profound influence on the style of modern
writers like Wang Zengqi, Ye Weilin and Gu Hua, etc.