Chinese Commoners (refined Edition)

Chinese Commoners (refined Edition)

by Zhang Manling

Length:
159Kwords39chapters
Latest:
Ch. 39Peking University Edition Postscript: Commoners in the Wind
Activity:
Updated 4y agoScraped 16d ago
23Favorites
0QD Score

About This Novel

There is a commoner spirit in Chinese civil society. It refers to those who stand alone outside the imperial palace and the scholarly community, with no name or rank, no position or respect. Zhang Manling's father, Zhang Jinde, was such a scholar from Kunming, Yunnan. Zhang Manling traces her father's Chinese-style life with words that are deeply painful and can be seen on the back of the paper. It goes straight into the changes and desolation of the dying commoner's true spirit, and directly into the responsibility and tempering of the commoner's personality when the collective spirit collapsed. The protagonist is not afraid of power, does not confuse God, does not give up his noble dignity in the dark, and only clings to the commoner spirit of doubt, rebellion, freedom and open-mindedness. His life is extremely desolate, which makes people sigh and sigh when reading it. In today's complex and ever-changing era, "Chinese Commoners" may be able to give people some inspiration on how an ordinary person can protect his or her own heart, how to shape his or her own spiritual dimension, and how to educate his or her children.

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