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Han Bangqing : ウィキペディア英語版 | Han Bangqing
Han Bangqing (; 1856–1894),〔Downer, Lesley. "(Pleasure Houses )." ''The New York Times''. November 20, 2005. Retrieved on March 27, 2015.〕 also known by the given name Ji (寄), courtesy name Ziyun (子雲), and pseudonyms Taixian (太仙), Dayi Shanren (大一山人), Hua Ye Lian Nong (花也憐儂), and Sanqing (三慶), was a late-Qing dynasty Chinese writer from Lou County, Songjiang Prefecture, Jiangsu (now a district of Shanghai).〔Wang, David Der-wei. "Foreword." In: Google Books (PT9 ).〕 As a child he went with his father to live in Beijing.〔"Chinese Literature from 1841 to 1937." The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature. Ed. Kang-i Sun Chang and Stephen Owen. Vol. 2. Cambridge University Press, 2010. 439. Print.〕 He failed at the imperial examinations many times,〔 even though he had a reputation as a prodigy in his childhood,〔 and eventually wrote for the newspaper ''Shen Bao'' in Shanghai. In 1892, he started what can be considered China's first for-profit literary magazine, the ''Wonderbook of Shanghai'', which lasted eight months,〔 and in which he published his novel ''Haishang Hua'' in instalments.〔 The novel has been widely acclaimed as a classic (particularly by Lu Xun, Hu Shih, and Eileen Chang) but is little read today, likely due to its being written entirely in Wu Chinese, unintelligible to Mandarin speakers.〔 It was translated into Mandarin and English by Eileen Chang. After Chang's death in 1995, the translation was discovered among her papers and published in English as ''The Sing-song Girls of Shanghai'' in 2005 after revision by Eva Hung.〔〔 Not long after publication of the novel, Han Bangqing died in 1894, aged 38. == References ==
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