- Hu Lancheng
Hu Lancheng (zh-tsp|t=胡蘭成|s=胡兰成|p=Hú Lánchéng) (Feb 28 1906 – July 25 1981) was a Chinese
writer and editor. He was married to the novelistEileen Chang from 1943 to 1947.During the
Second Sino-Japanese War he collaborated with the Japanese, serving briefly in the puppet government in China headed byWang Jingwei in 1939-40. This fact made many Chinese regard him as aHanjian or traitor, and led to intense controversy regarding the value of his works (including those which were non-political).After the war, he went into hiding, eventually fleeing to Japan. In the early 1970s he taught in the
Chinese Culture University in Taiwan for several years, until popular pressure forced him to return to Japan, where he died in Tokyo in 1981.Works
*《今生今世》(This Life, These Times), a memoir;
*《禪是一枝花》, a study in Buddhism;
*《中國文學史話》, a study on the history of Chinese literature ;
*《山河歲月》ee also
*
Eileen Chang References
* [http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/positions/v011/11.3berry.html Words and Images] , "Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique" 11.3 (2003) 675-716, where Taiwanese writer
Chu Tien-wen talks about Hu's influence on her.
*Excerpt of ‘This Life, These Times’, "Renditions" (ISSN 0377-3515), No. 45, translated by D.E. Pollard
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.