Wei Wei () (January 16, 1920 – August 24, 2008), originally known as
Hong Jie (), was a
poet, a
prose writer, a literary report writer, a
journalist, a vice-editor-in-chief and the
editor of various
newspapers in
China and a
propagandist. His works are noted for their themes of
patriotism,
communism, and
nationalism. Apart from using the name
Wei Wei, he once used the pen name
Hong Yangshu (紅陽樹) in some of his publications. He changed his name from
Hong Jie to
Wei Wei in 1937 when he had started a new page of his life --- a political one.
Biography
Wei Wei was born into a poor family in
Zhengzhou,
Henan, and received a rudimentary
primary education. He showed early interest in
calligraphy and
literature, but was unable to receive much education after
elementary school, when both of his parents died. He was largely self-taught and was greatly influenced by the radical
Chinese literature of the 1920s and 30s, including works by authors like
Lu Xun and
Mao Dun.
Wei Wei joined the
Eighth Route Army at the outbreak of the
Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937 and was educated to be a
propagandist and
journalist. After joining the
Chinese Communist Party in 1938, he rose quickly through party ranks. He became known for reporting from the
front lines, which continued throughout the
Korean War and the
Vietnam War. He also became known for composing a series of
Communist-themed novels,
short stories, and
operas.
Wei died on August 24, 2008 in...
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