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Northeast Exile Literature Historical Materials and Research Series·children Without a Country
General Fiction东北流亡文学史料与研究丛书·没有祖国的孩子
Shu Qun
"Children Without a Country/Northeast Exile Literature Historical Materials and Research Series·Works Volume" contains a total of 23 short stories, including "Children without a Country", "Mongolian Night", "Wedding Night" and other works. "Children Without a Country/Northeast Exile Literature Historical Materials and Research Series·Works Volume" tells the story of Guoli who lost his country and home due to Japan's invasion of Korea. His father was brutally killed for leading workers to fight in the Governor's Mansion. His mother hoped that Guoli would "stop living the life of a pig" and let him flee to Northeast China to find the road to freedom. Here, Guoli wanted to go to school like other children, but he was ridiculed by the Soviet child Gulisha. When Guoli asked why Guovalev could go to school, Guolisha told him that "there is no longer a country like North Korea in the world." Everything was just that Guoli was a "child without a country." The work does not directly describe the Chinese battlefield and the tragic situation of the Chinese people. Instead, it uses the experience of the North Korean child Guoli and uses the foreign boy as a mirror to observe the fate of the people of the motherland who are in dire straits. It strengthens the belief in saving the nation and reveals the passionate patriotism everywhere in the words.
"Children Without a Country/Northeast Exile Literature Historical Materials and Research Series·Works Volume" contains a total of 23 short stories, including "Children without a Country", "Mongolian Night", "Wedding Night" and other works. "Children Without a Country/Northeast Exile Literature Historical Materials and Research Series·Works Volume" tells the story of Guoli who lost his country and home due to Japan's invasion of Korea. His father was brutally killed for leading workers to fight in the Governor's Mansion. His mother hoped that Guoli would "stop living the life of a pig" and let him flee to Northeast China to find the road to freedom. Here, Guoli wanted to go to school like other children, but he was ridiculed by the Soviet child Gulisha. When Guoli asked why Guovalev could go to school, Guolisha told him that "there is no longer a country like North Korea in the world." Everything was just that Guoli was a "child without a country." The work does not directly describe the Chinese battlefield and the tragic situation of the Chinese people. Instead, it uses the experience of the North Korean child Guoli and uses the foreign boy as a mirror to observe the fate of the people of the motherland who are in dire straits. It strengthens the belief in saving the nation and reveals the passionate patriotism everywhere in the words.