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词条 Wang Dulu
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Works

      The Crane-Iron Series  

  3. Translations

  4. Adaptations

  5. See also

  6. References

  7. External links

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|birth_name = Wang Baoxiang
|birth_date = 1909
|birth_place = Beijing, China
|death_date = 1977
|death_place = Tieling, China
|occupation = Novelist
|nationality = Chinese
|spouse = Li Danquan
|period =
|genre = Wuxia
|influences =
|influenced =
|website =
}}

Wang Baoxiang ({{zh|t=王葆祥}}; courtesy name Xiaoyu ({{zh|t=霄羽}}); 1909–1977), better known by the pen name Wang Dulu ({{zh|s=王度庐|t=王度廬}}), was a Chinese writer of wuxia novels. Wang is best known for his work, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, that was adapted into a successful feature film of the same title by film director Ang Lee in 2000.

Biography

Wang was born in 1909 in Beijing to a poor family of Manchu background. He worked as an editor for a newspaper agency and as a clerk for a merchant association before becoming a writer. He lived through the New Culture Movement and the May Fourth Movement and began writing novels in the 1930s. Most of Wang's early works were of the detective and mystery fiction genres.

Wang wrote more than 50 novels. He started writing wuxia novels after moving to Qingdao. Between 1938 and 1949, Wang wrote 16 wuxia novels. In 1949, he stopped writing and became a schoolteacher after the Chinese Civil War. He was sent to the countryside during the Cultural Revolution and died from illness in 1977 after the revolution. Wang was married to Li Danquan and they had three children.

Li Danquan met film director Ang Lee during the shooting of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (an adaptation of one of Wang's works) in 1999.

Works

Wang is best known for his wuxia-romance novels, which usually have tragic endings, as well as his social-romance novels. He is considered to be one of the pioneers of the modern genre of wuxia, along with other established wuxia writers such as Jin Yong and Liang Yusheng. Within the genre, Wang had secured his place as one of the "Ten Great Writers" and one of the "Four Great Writers of the Northern School", along with Li Shoumin, Gong Baiyu and Zheng Zhengyin.

Zhang Gansheng, a scholar of modern and contemporary Chinese literature, has characterized Wang as perfecting the wuxia genre, and paving the way for a generation of great writers. However, according to Xu Sinian, another scholar, there has not been any detailed critique of Wang's works, apart from that of the Taiwanese scholar Ye Hongsheng.

The Crane-Iron Series

Wang is remembered for his five-part epic wuxia-romance series, often called collectively the Crane-Iron Series (鶴鐵系列), named after the first characters in the titles of the first and last installments in the series. The stories chronicle the struggles of four generations of youxia. The following titles are arranged in chronological order rather than by their publication date.

  1. Crane Startles Kunlun (鶴驚崑崙)
  2. Precious Sword, Golden Hairpin (寶劍金釵)
  3. Sword Force, Pearl Shine (劍氣珠光)
  4. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (臥虎藏龍)
  5. Iron Knight, Silver Vase (鐵騎銀瓶)

Crane Startles Kunlun was written third, after Sword Force, Pearl Shine, and serialized under the title Dancing Crane, Singing Luan (舞鶴鳴鸞記).

Translations

The two first volumes were translated into French in four volumes by "Calmann-Lévy" editions. As of 2017, no official English language translations of his novels exist. However, there is a manhua series of the same title (and a second, revised edition), created by Andy Seto, although the series departs substantially from the written text. An unofficial English translation of Crane Frightens Kunlun exists, and one was in progress for Precious Sword, Golden Hairpin.[1]

Adaptations

Ang Lee's 2000 film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon includes episodes and information from some of the other books in the series as well as the novel which shares the same title as the film. The official website of actress Michelle Yeoh, who stars in the film, has an English-language summary of the five books.[2]

In January 2013, it was reported that The Weinstein Company would produce a movie adaptation of Iron Knight, Silver Vase, with director Ronny Yu.[3] Renamed Sword of Destiny, the project began principal photography in New Zealand in August 2014, with Yuen Woo-ping as director.

See also

  • Gu Long
  • Jin Yong
  • Liang Yusheng

References

1. ^{{cite web|author= Andy |url=http://tu-shu-guan.blogspot.com/2007/09/crane-startles-kunlun-chapter-1.html |title=中翻英圖書館 Translations: The Crane Startles Kunlun, Chapter 1 |publisher=Tu-shu-guan.blogspot.com |date=2007-07-09 |accessdate=2012-11-26}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://michelleyeoh.info/Movie/Ch/novels.html |title= Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Novels & Prequel | website=MichelleYeoh.info |date= |accessdate=2012-11-26}}
3. ^{{cite news|last=Pulver|first=Andrew|title=Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon sequel on its way – without Ang Lee|url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2013/jan/25/crouching-tiger-hidden-dragon-sequel|newspaper=The Guardian |location=London |date=25 January 2013}}

External links

  • Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: Crane - Iron Pentalogy
  • {{Imdb name|0238893}} [https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0238893/ IMDb]
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Wang Dulu}}{{Wang Dulu}}

6 : 1909 births|1977 deaths|Wuxia writers|Republic of China novelists|Writers from Beijing|20th-century Chinese novelists

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