Autumn Night
A first reading note on Lu Xun’s “Autumn Night”: sparse imagery, emotional ambiguity, and the lonely posture of resistance.
6 articles
A first reading note on Lu Xun’s “Autumn Night”: sparse imagery, emotional ambiguity, and the lonely posture of resistance.
A reading of Lu Xun’s “Farewell to the Shadow” as a split self: survival versus lucidity, and the tragic cost of staying alive in a hostile world.
A reading of Lu Xun’s “The Beggar”: dust, walls, social decay, and the tragedy of seeking truth in a world that rewards performance.
A satirical reading of Lu Xun’s “My Lost Love”: comic form on the surface, sharp critique of literary affectation and self-deceptive pride underneath.
In Lu Xun’s “Revenge,” two armed figures refuse both embrace and violence, and that refusal becomes a devastating counterattack against spectatorship.
Using the crucifixion narrative, Lu Xun reconstructs revenge as lucid witness: not divine punishment, but watching the crowd condemn itself.