Renowned writer Ba Jin dies at age 101

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Ba Jin, one of China's most acclaimed writers, died at age 101 in Shanghai
on Oct. 17 after a six-year battle with cancer.
"We have lost one of the most sensitive hearts of our time and one of the
most important and widely read Chinese writers of the 20th century," said Chen
Sihe, professor and dean of the Chinese Language and Literature Department of Fudan
University .
A Brief Biography
Born into a wealthy feudal official's family in Chengdu,
capital of southwest China's Sichuan
province in 1904, Ba received a good education under private tutorship in
his hometown and later in Shanghai.
Ba's given name was Li Yaotang or Li Fugan. He chose the pen
name "Ba Jin" in memory of Baranpo, one of his schoolmates in France who
committed suicide because he detested the world and its ways. The word "Jin" was
proposed by a Russian schoolmate studying philosophy.
In 1927, Ba went to study in France, where he started his literature career
and completed his first novel Destruction a year later. It was a tale
of revolution and romance, which caused a sensation when published in Fiction
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| A family photo in
1907 | Monthly in 1929.
Ba returned to China in the winter of 1928, settling in Shanghai. From there
he wrote and translated numerous books, including novels, short stories, and
essays, completing a total of 13 million words. He was best known for his
trilogy Jiliu (Torrent), which was written between 1931 and 1940, and
included three semi-autobiographical novels.
Some of his strongest writings were created during China's War of Resistance
Against Japanese Aggression (1937-45), including the short novels "A Garden of
Repose" (1944), "Ward No 4" (1946) and "Cold Nights" (1947), according to Chen,
who has carried out academic research on the writer and his works for two
decades.
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