Nhất Linh

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Nhất Linh

Nguyễn Tường Tam (

Saigon, 7 July 1963) better known by his pen-name Nhất Linh (一灵, "One Spirit") was a Vietnamese writer, editor and publisher in colonial Hanoi.[1] He founded the literary group and publishing house Tự Lực Văn Đoàn
("Self-Strengthening Literary Group") in 1932 with the literary magazines Phong Hóa ("Customs", or "Mores") and Ngày Nay ("Today"), and serialized, then published, many of the influential realism-influenced novels of the 1930s.

In 1935, Nguyễn published a satirical and fictional travelogue about his time in France, Going to the West (Đi Tây). His aim was to show that the French colonialists did not grant to the working classes in Vietnam the same rights they accorded to workers in France.[citation needed] In addition to Nhất Linh, scholars have noted that the many Vietnamese westernized elites returning from France had been embracing the French “ideal of progress” as a lens to imagine Vietnam in a modern light of social equality and democracy.[2]

In the 1940s he organized a political party, Đại Việt Dân Chính ("Great Viet Democratic Party"

VNQDD
).

After release from China Nhất Linh returned to Vietnam in 1945, to become

Thich Quang Duc, the monk who had self-immolated in protest against Diem's persecution of Buddhism
a month earlier.

Works

Painting "La Tonkinoise Et La Vieille Sage" by writer Nhất Linh

Novels

  • Gánh hàng hoa (The Flower Seller) (with Khái Hưng, 1934)
  • Đời mưa gió (The Stormy Life) (with Khái Hưng, 1934)
  • Nắng thu (Autumn Sun) (1934)
  • Đoạn tuyệt ( The End) (1934-1935)
  • Lạnh lùng (Estrangement) (1935-1936)
  • Đôi bạn (Two Friends) (1936-1937)
  • Bướm trắng (White Butterfly) (1938-1939)
  • Xóm cầu mới (New Bridge Hamlet) (1949-1957).
  • Giòng sông Thanh Thủy (Blue River) (1960-1961).
  • Ba người bộ hành (Three Pedestrians)
  • Chi bộ hai người (The Cell of Two)
  • Vọng quốc (Looking Back)

Stories

  • Nho phong (Confucian Mannerism) (1924)
  • Người quay tơ (The Weaver) (1926)
  • Anh phải sống (You've Got to Live) (with Khái Hưng, 1932 - 1933)
  • Hai buổi chiều vàng (Two Golden Afternoons) (1934-1937)
  • Thế rồi một buổi chiều (It Happened One Afternoon) (1934-1937)
  • Thương chồng (Feeling Sorry) (1961)

Essay

  • Viết và đọc tiểu thuyết (Writing and Reading Novels) (1952-1961)

Travelogue

  • Đi Tây (Going to the West) (1935)

Translations

References

  1. ^ Hy V. Luong Postwar Vietnam: Dynamics of a Transforming Society 2003 - Page 263 "The preeminent editor of the 1930s was Nguyen TuongTam (1906-1963), better known by his pen name of Nhất Linh. Two years after returning from France in 1930, Nhất Linh took control of a Hanoi weekly called Phong Hoa (Customs),.."
  2. ^ Duy Lap Nguyen, “Tourism and the Irony of Colonial Underdevelopment in Nhất Linh’s ‘Going to the West,’” Studies in Travel Writing 22 (2018), 371–388 (385).
  3. ^ Archimedes L. A. Patti -Why Viet Nam?: Prelude to America's Albatross Page 533 1982 "A pro-Japanese faction under the leadership of Nguyen Tuong Tam adopted the name Dai Viet Dan Chinh (Great Viet Nam Democratic Party)"
  4. ^ Spencer C. Tucker -The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War 2011 Page 837 "In the early 1940s Nhat Linh (a pen name) participated in revolutionary activities, such as organizing the Dai Viet Dan Chinh. He then fled to China, where he was arrested on the orders of Chang Fa Kwei at the same time as Ho Chi Minh."
  5. ^ Spencer C. Tucker The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War Page 837 2011 "Returning to Vietnam in 1945, Nhất Linh became minister of foreign affairs in the first coalition government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam"
  6. ^ Emily Bronte, Đỉnh Gió Hú, Nhất Linh, Nguyễn Tường Thiết dịch

Bibliography

  • Strašáková, Mária (2011). Life and writings of Nguyễn Tuòng Tam (Thesis). .