Shu Qingchun (1February 3, 899-1August 24, 966) was born in Beijing, China. He is a modern novelist, a famous writer, an outstanding master of language and a people's artist. He is the first writer in New China to win the title of "People's Artist".
Grassland is an essay written by Lao She, a modern writer and poet. By 2022, it has been selected into the new curriculum standard of People's Education Edition (old textbook), the textbook compiled by the Ministry of Education, the fifth grade 1 lesson, and the sixth grade 1 lesson. This paper mainly describes three vivid pictures: grassland scenery map, welcome map and host-guest gathering map.
Story background
During the War of Liberation, he wrote this book during his break at Shandong University in Qingdao, where he rented a bungalow as a quiet place for his writing and writing drama literature. 196 1 year1October 13 was published in People's Daily.
In the article Grassland, Lao She, the master of language, deliberately combined the descriptions of opposites and exclusions, so that language can see the meaning in simplicity and philosophy in everyday life, and express complex thoughts and feelings vividly. The analysis is as follows:
"The lines of those hills are so soft, just like Chinese paintings only render green without ink lines. Green is flowing everywhere and gently flows into the clouds. "
"Emerald lust flows" means that emerald will flow but not flow; And "flowing into the clouds" means that the color of emerald has flowed into the clouds. Are the two contradictory? In fact, this is not contradictory, but vividly shows the realistic modality of grassland scenery. "Green wants to flow, slowly flowing into the clouds" describes two different visual images respectively. The first sentence is a close-up description: the grassland is thick and green, shiny and shiny, giving people the feeling of "wanting to flow" This is turning static into dynamic, highlighting the color and life of grass and expressing the author's infinite love and admiration. The last sentence is a long-distance description: from a distance, the grassland meets the sky, the thick green sets off the sky, and the jade is thousands of miles away, constantly extending to the depths of the sky. Besides, the car is driving forward. Don't those hills in the field of vision, which are "only green and don't want ink lines", and grasslands thousands of miles away, all quietly flow to the sky?