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Lu Xun's main deeds

Many people know that Lu Xun is the greatest modern literary writer in China, but they don't know how Lu Xun embarked on the path of literary creation.

Lu Xun is the national soul of modern China, and his spirit has profoundly influenced his readers and researchers, as well as generations of modern Chinese writers and intellectuals. Lu Xun pursued democracy throughout his life, declaring war on the old feudal culture as early as the beginning of the New Literature Movement, and constantly fighting against the old ideas and culture that oppressed the people. After the "Women's College Tide", Lu Xun argued with the warlords who persecuted the students, and he defied violence by penning a fight, which showed his integrity as a man of letters. Later, under the rule of the Kuomintang, he boldly disclosed its dark rule.

But Lu Xun did not start out as a literary writer, but as a medical student who wanted to be a good doctor! Lu Xun came to Japan in 1902 to study, first in Tokyo, where he was disappointed by the drunkenness and ineptitude of the "Qing students" he met. Feeling the ignorance and numbness of the Chinese people, he was y convinced that medicine could only relieve the physical pain of the patients, but in order to truly save his own people, the first step was to save the spirit of the people and to awaken their consciousness. In the dark years when China was called "the sick man of East Asia", Lu Xun went to Japan to study with the passion of saving the country through medicine.

When he saw in the movie that Chinese people were beheaded by the Japanese invaders, the surrounding crowd was filled with people who saw their compatriots being killed and were insensitive to the scene, his heart was greatly shaken, and he felt that "all of the weak and stupid nationals, even if the physical fitness of how healthy and strong, can only be a meaningless publicity material and spectators, sick and dead, more or less needn't be thought of as unfortunate. "

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Not long after, Lu Xun left Sendai Medical College and went to Tokyo, where he contacted Xu Shoushang and other like-minded friends to organize a literary magazine. He soon began his literary career. Later, he wrote a large number of essays and novels, and became China's greatest modern literary writer.