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Shao Xunmei

Shao Xunmei (Chinese: 邵洵美; Shanghainese: Zau Sinmay; 1906–1968)[1] was a Chinese poet and publisher.[2] He was a contributing writer for T'ien Hsia Monthly,[3] and also was the owner of Modern Sketch.[4] He originated from Shanghai.[5] Jonathan Hutt wrote in Monstre Sacré: The Decadent World of Sinmay Zau that "For many, Shao was not simply inspired by the Occident but rather was of it" and that his lack of awareness of "the Chinese literary scene" distinguished him from his colleagues.[1] On some occasions he used the name Hao Wen (浩文).[6]

Shao Xunmei
Native name
邵洵美
BornShao Yunlong; 邵雲龍
1906 (1906)
Shanghai, Qing China
Died1968 (aged 61–62)
Shanghai, People's Republic of China
Resting placeGui Yan Cemetery
Pen nameHao Wen; 浩文
OccupationWriter, poet, publisher
LanguageChinese
CitizenshipChinese
EducationBeaux-Arts de Paris
Years active1918-36
Spouse
Sheng Peiyu
(m. 1927)
PartnerEmily Hahn
Shao Xunmei
Chinese邵洵美
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinShào Xúnměi
Wade–GilesShao Hsün-mei
Shao Yunlong
Traditional Chinese邵雲龍
Simplified Chinese邵云龙
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinShào Yúnlóng
Wade–GilesShao Yün-lung
Hao Wen
Chinese浩文
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHào Wén
Wade–GilesHao Wen

Life edit

He was born Shao Yunlong (Chinese: 邵雲龍; lit. 'dragon in the skies') in 1906 into a wealthy Shanghainese family with its ancestral hometown in Yuyao, Zhejiang. Shao lived in the wealthiest part of Shanghai, Bubbling Well Road. His grandfather Shao Youlian [zh] was a high-ranking official who served as governor of Taiwan and as a diplomat to Russia. His father Shao Heng (邵恆) married Sheng Xihui (盛樨蕙), a daughter of the tycoon Sheng Xuanhuai; Xunmei was the oldest of their six children.[1]

Shao had been tailed by tabloids since his childhood and had various girlfriends including the actress White Lotus (白蓮 Báilián) and a woman with the English name Prudence; Shao was briefly jailed after a man who was infatuated with Prudence was murdered but Shao was found to have been not guilty and released.[1]

Shao began a tour of Europe at age 17 in 1923 and continued it until 1927, going to Naples, Italy; Cambridge, England, and the École des Beaux Arts in Paris;[1] he was educated in Cambridge and Paris.[7] While in Europe he had relationships with women there.[1] He finished a poetry collection towards the end of the trip and published it, titled Parade and May, in 1927. He became intrigued by the English writer Algernon Charles Swinburne and French writer Charles Baudelaire. The titles of works Fire and Flesh (火與肉 Huǒ yǔ ròu) and Flower-like Evil (花一般的罪惡 Huā yībān de zuì'è) were respectively inspired by a Swinburne poem and Les Fleurs du Mal by Baudelaire. The latter is an updated version of the earlier Paradise and May.[1]

In December 1927 he married his cousin and childhood love Sheng Peiyu (盛佩玉), a granddaughter of Sheng Xuanhuai. Hutt described Sheng as a "trophy wife".[1] She was also known as "Zoa".[6]

Twenty-five Poems (詩二十五首 Shīèr shíwǔ shǒu), Shao's collection of poetry that was published in 1936, did not garner significant attention. Hutt stated that Shao's popularity was declining by 1936.[1]

In 1937 he began an affair with Emily "Mickey" Hahn;[1] the affair ended after Hahn stopped smoking opium.[5] When Hahn wrote articles for The New Yorker,[8] she referred to Shao as "Pan Heh-ven,"[5] forming the basis of the 1942 book Mr. Pan.[8] Hahn used Shao as the inspiration for Sun Yuin-loong, a character in Steps of the Sun.[5] After the Japanese invasion Hahn was not interned since she had stated she was legally married to Shao Xunmei on a document and therefore the Japanese treated her as, in the words of Taras Grescoe of The New Yorker, "an honorary Asian".[5] Hahn stated that Shao's wife approved of the document since it was a possible method of saving his press and that Shao had not been married "according to foreign law".[6] According to an article published in Ming Pao, a Hong Kong newspaper, during World War II, Shao had a habit of drinking alcohol and gambling and therefore racked up a lot of expenses; Hahn covered the costs by selling her books.[6] Hahn later wrote about Shao in her memoir, China to Me: A Partial Autobiography, using his actual name, spelled as "Sinmay Zau".[1]

Shao had a son, Shao Zucheng, who attended schools operated by American missionaries and became an English teacher.[9] He also had a daughter, Shao Xiaohong.[1]

In 1958 Shao Xunmei wrote a letter to a friend in the United States and as a result was imprisoned. He was released in three years but his health had declined and did not improve afterwards. Shao Zucheng stated "When he came out of jail, he was so thin. He looked just like a monkey."[9]

Hahn learned that Shao eventually stopped using opium. After Shao died, Hahn was unaware that he was dead.[6] He was buried in Gui Yan Cemetery.[10]

Legacy edit

Hutt stated that Shao continued to be perceived as "a caricature" by the 1990s even though his image had been somewhat rehabilitated in that decade.[1]

Jicheng Sun and Hal Swindall, authors of "A Chinese Swinburne: Shao Xunmei's Life and Art," wrote circa 2015 that few people were aware of him "except for a handful of scholars of modern Chinese literature"; they stated that there were not many scholarly articles about Shao and that reference books published in China "give him a few lines as a minor poet with decadent tendencies".[2]

Selected works edit

  • Flower-like Evil (花一般的罪惡 Huā yībān de zuì'è). Jinwu shudian (Shanghai), 1918.
  • Paradise and May (poetry collection), 1927.
  • Heaven and May (天堂與五月 Tiāntáng yǔ wǔ yuè). Guanghua shuju (Shanghai), 1927.
  • Fire and Flesh (火與肉 Huǒ yǔ ròu). Jinwu shudian (Shanghai), 1928.
  • "Jinwu Tanhua" (金屋談話; Talk at Maison d'or). Jinwu Yuekan (金屋月刊; La Maison d'Or Monthly), January 1929, Volume 1, Issue 1, p. 157.
    • Translated into English by Reverend Moule and Paul Pelliot, within Marco Polo: The Description of the World (Routledge and Sons, London, 1938).
  • As Hao, Wen: Review of The Escaped Cock by D.H. Lawrence. In: "Shubao Chunqiu" (書報春秋; Books and Newspapers Annals), Xinyue (新月), 1932, 1–4.
  • A One-Way Conversation (一個人的談話 Yīgèrén de tánhuà). Diyi Chubanshe (Shanghai), 1935.
  • Twenty-five Poems (詩二十五首 Shīèr shíwǔ shǒu), 1936.

Heaven and May and Twenty-five Poems have been translated into English by Jicheng Sun and Hal Swindall in The Verse of Shao Xunmei (Paramus: Homa & Sekey Books, 2016)

References edit

  • Sun, Jicheng and Hal Swindall. "A Chinese Swinburne: Shao Xunmei's Life and Art." In: Marino, Elisabetta and Tanfer Emin Tunc. The West in Asia and Asia in the West: Essays on Transnational Interactions. McFarland, January 16, 2015. ISBN . Start p. 133.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hutt, Jonathan (June 2010). "Monstre Sacré: The Decadent World of Sinmay Zau 邵洵美". China Heritage Quarterly. Australian National University (22). ISSN 1833-8461.
  2. ^ a b Sun and Swindall, p. 133.
  3. ^ Gill, Ian (2018-05-17). "From belle époque Shanghai to occupied Hong Kong, the literati who broke down cultural barriers". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2018-07-30.
  4. ^ Jones, Andrew F. Developmental Fairy Tales. Harvard University Press, May 2, 2011. ISBN 0674061039, 9780674061033. p. 228.
  5. ^ a b c d e Grescoe, Taras (2017-04-11). "Getting to the Bottom of a Mickey Hahn Mystery". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2018-07-30. [...]and Zau Sinmay, a Shanghainese poet and publisher.[...]Hahn's real-life affair with Zau ended when she quit her own opium habit
  6. ^ a b c d e Bien, Gloria. Baudelaire in China: A Study in Literary Reception. University of Delaware, December 14, 2012. ISBN 1611493900, 9781611493900. p. 125. "47. Hao Wen 浩文 (pseud. of Shao Xunmei),"
  7. ^ Sanderson, Daniel (June 2010). "T'IEN HSIA Emily Hahn Does 'All-Under-Heaven'". China Heritage Quarterly. Australia National University. ISSN 1833-8461. Retrieved 2018-07-30.
  8. ^ a b Lee, Leo Ou-fan (Li Oufan). Shanghai Modern: The Flowering of a New Urban Culture in China, 1930-1945 (Interpretations of Asia Series). Harvard University Press, 1999. ISBN 067480550X, 9780674805507. p. 377.
  9. ^ a b . Associated Press at the St. Petersburg Times. 2003-02-16. Archived from the original on 2005-05-31. Retrieved 2018-07-30.
  10. ^ Taras Grescoe (14 June 2016). Shanghai Grand: Forbidden Love and International Intrigue in a Doomed World. St. Martin's Press. pp. 3–. ISBN 978-1-250-04971-1.

Further reading edit

English:

Chinese:

  • Li Guangde. "Shao Xunmei de shi yu shilun" (The poetry and poetic critiques of Shao Xunmei). Huzhou Shizhuan Xuebao, 1985.22.
  • Sheng, Peiyu. "Yi Shao Xunmei" (Remembering Shao Xunmei). Wenjiao Ziliao (Materials on Literary Education), Nanjing Normal College, 1982. No. 5, p. 47-72.
  • Sheng, Peiyu. "Wo he Shao Xunmei" (Shao Xunmei and I). Huzhou Shizhuan Xuebao (Academic Journal of the Huzhoa Normal College), 1984. No. 5, p. 47-72.
  • Su, Xuelin (蘇雪林). "Tuijiadang pai de Shao Xunmei" (颓加荡派的邵洵美 "The Decadent School's Shao Xunmei). Er-sanshi niandai zuojia yu zuopin (二三十年代作家與作品; Authors and Works of the Twenties and Thirties). Guangdong chunbanshe (Taipei), 1980. p. 148-155.
  • Wen, Xing (文星). "Tuifeishiren Shao Xunmei" (頹廢詩人邵洵美). Ming Pao (Hong Kong). April 5, 1974.
  • Zhang, Kebiao. "Haishang Caizi Gao Chuban-Ji Shao Xunmei" (A Shanghai Talent Getting Involved in Publishing-Remembering Shao Xunmei). Shanghai Wenshi (Shanghai Literature and History), 1989. No. 2, p. 4-10.
  • "." 南方人物周刊 [zh]. 2012-12-21.

shao, xunmei, this, chinese, name, family, name, shao, chinese, 邵洵美, shanghainese, sinmay, 1906, 1968, chinese, poet, publisher, contributing, writer, hsia, monthly, also, owner, modern, sketch, originated, from, shanghai, jonathan, hutt, wrote, monstre, sacré. In this Chinese name the family name is Shao Zau Shao Xunmei Chinese 邵洵美 Shanghainese Zau Sinmay 1906 1968 1 was a Chinese poet and publisher 2 He was a contributing writer for T ien Hsia Monthly 3 and also was the owner of Modern Sketch 4 He originated from Shanghai 5 Jonathan Hutt wrote in Monstre Sacre The Decadent World of Sinmay Zau that For many Shao was not simply inspired by the Occident but rather was of it and that his lack of awareness of the Chinese literary scene distinguished him from his colleagues 1 On some occasions he used the name Hao Wen 浩文 6 Shao XunmeiNative name邵洵美BornShao Yunlong 邵雲龍1906 1906 Shanghai Qing ChinaDied1968 aged 61 62 Shanghai People s Republic of ChinaResting placeGui Yan CemeteryPen nameHao Wen 浩文OccupationWriter poet publisherLanguageChineseCitizenshipChineseEducationBeaux Arts de ParisYears active1918 36SpouseSheng Peiyu m 1927 wbr PartnerEmily HahnShao XunmeiChinese邵洵美TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinShao XunmeiWade GilesShao Hsun meiShao YunlongTraditional Chinese邵雲龍Simplified Chinese邵云龙TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinShao YunlongWade GilesShao Yun lungHao WenChinese浩文TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHao WenWade GilesHao Wen Contents 1 Life 2 Legacy 3 Selected works 4 References 4 1 Notes 5 Further readingLife editHe was born Shao Yunlong Chinese 邵雲龍 lit dragon in the skies in 1906 into a wealthy Shanghainese family with its ancestral hometown in Yuyao Zhejiang Shao lived in the wealthiest part of Shanghai Bubbling Well Road His grandfather Shao Youlian zh was a high ranking official who served as governor of Taiwan and as a diplomat to Russia His father Shao Heng 邵恆 married Sheng Xihui 盛樨蕙 a daughter of the tycoon Sheng Xuanhuai Xunmei was the oldest of their six children 1 Shao had been tailed by tabloids since his childhood and had various girlfriends including the actress White Lotus 白蓮 Bailian and a woman with the English name Prudence Shao was briefly jailed after a man who was infatuated with Prudence was murdered but Shao was found to have been not guilty and released 1 Shao began a tour of Europe at age 17 in 1923 and continued it until 1927 going to Naples Italy Cambridge England and the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris 1 he was educated in Cambridge and Paris 7 While in Europe he had relationships with women there 1 He finished a poetry collection towards the end of the trip and published it titled Parade and May in 1927 He became intrigued by the English writer Algernon Charles Swinburne and French writer Charles Baudelaire The titles of works Fire and Flesh 火與肉 Huǒ yǔ rou and Flower like Evil 花一般的罪惡 Hua yiban de zui e were respectively inspired by a Swinburne poem and Les Fleurs du Mal by Baudelaire The latter is an updated version of the earlier Paradise and May 1 In December 1927 he married his cousin and childhood love Sheng Peiyu 盛佩玉 a granddaughter of Sheng Xuanhuai Hutt described Sheng as a trophy wife 1 She was also known as Zoa 6 Twenty five Poems 詩二十五首 Shier shiwǔ shǒu Shao s collection of poetry that was published in 1936 did not garner significant attention Hutt stated that Shao s popularity was declining by 1936 1 In 1937 he began an affair with Emily Mickey Hahn 1 the affair ended after Hahn stopped smoking opium 5 When Hahn wrote articles for The New Yorker 8 she referred to Shao as Pan Heh ven 5 forming the basis of the 1942 book Mr Pan 8 Hahn used Shao as the inspiration for Sun Yuin loong a character in Steps of the Sun 5 After the Japanese invasion Hahn was not interned since she had stated she was legally married to Shao Xunmei on a document and therefore the Japanese treated her as in the words of Taras Grescoe of The New Yorker an honorary Asian 5 Hahn stated that Shao s wife approved of the document since it was a possible method of saving his press and that Shao had not been married according to foreign law 6 According to an article published in Ming Pao a Hong Kong newspaper during World War II Shao had a habit of drinking alcohol and gambling and therefore racked up a lot of expenses Hahn covered the costs by selling her books 6 Hahn later wrote about Shao in her memoir China to Me A Partial Autobiography using his actual name spelled as Sinmay Zau 1 Shao had a son Shao Zucheng who attended schools operated by American missionaries and became an English teacher 9 He also had a daughter Shao Xiaohong 1 In 1958 Shao Xunmei wrote a letter to a friend in the United States and as a result was imprisoned He was released in three years but his health had declined and did not improve afterwards Shao Zucheng stated When he came out of jail he was so thin He looked just like a monkey 9 Hahn learned that Shao eventually stopped using opium After Shao died Hahn was unaware that he was dead 6 He was buried in Gui Yan Cemetery 10 Legacy editHutt stated that Shao continued to be perceived as a caricature by the 1990s even though his image had been somewhat rehabilitated in that decade 1 Jicheng Sun and Hal Swindall authors of A Chinese Swinburne Shao Xunmei s Life and Art wrote circa 2015 that few people were aware of him except for a handful of scholars of modern Chinese literature they stated that there were not many scholarly articles about Shao and that reference books published in China give him a few lines as a minor poet with decadent tendencies 2 Selected works editFlower like Evil 花一般的罪惡 Hua yiban de zui e Jinwu shudian Shanghai 1918 Paradise and May poetry collection 1927 Heaven and May 天堂與五月 Tiantang yǔ wǔ yue Guanghua shuju Shanghai 1927 Fire and Flesh 火與肉 Huǒ yǔ rou Jinwu shudian Shanghai 1928 Jinwu Tanhua 金屋談話 Talk at Maison d or Jinwu Yuekan 金屋月刊 La Maison d Or Monthly January 1929 Volume 1 Issue 1 p 157 Translated into English by Reverend Moule and Paul Pelliot within Marco Polo The Description of the World Routledge and Sons London 1938 As Hao Wen Review of The Escaped Cock by D H Lawrence In Shubao Chunqiu 書報春秋 Books and Newspapers Annals Xinyue 新月 1932 1 4 A One Way Conversation 一個人的談話 Yigeren de tanhua Diyi Chubanshe Shanghai 1935 Twenty five Poems 詩二十五首 Shier shiwǔ shǒu 1936 Heaven and May and Twenty five Poems have been translated into English by Jicheng Sun and Hal Swindall in The Verse of Shao Xunmei Paramus Homa amp Sekey Books 2016 References editSun Jicheng and Hal Swindall A Chinese Swinburne Shao Xunmei s Life and Art In Marino Elisabetta and Tanfer Emin Tunc The West in Asia and Asia in the West Essays on Transnational Interactions McFarland January 16 2015 ISBN Start p 133 Notes edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hutt Jonathan June 2010 Monstre Sacre The Decadent World of Sinmay Zau 邵洵美 China Heritage Quarterly Australian National University 22 ISSN 1833 8461 a b Sun and Swindall p 133 Gill Ian 2018 05 17 From belle epoque Shanghai to occupied Hong Kong the literati who broke down cultural barriers South China Morning Post Retrieved 2018 07 30 Jones Andrew F Developmental Fairy Tales Harvard University Press May 2 2011 ISBN 0674061039 9780674061033 p 228 a b c d e Grescoe Taras 2017 04 11 Getting to the Bottom of a Mickey Hahn Mystery The New Yorker Retrieved 2018 07 30 and Zau Sinmay a Shanghainese poet and publisher Hahn s real life affair with Zau ended when she quit her own opium habit a b c d e Bien Gloria Baudelaire in China A Study in Literary Reception University of Delaware December 14 2012 ISBN 1611493900 9781611493900 p 125 47 Hao Wen 浩文 pseud of Shao Xunmei Sanderson Daniel June 2010 T IEN HSIA Emily Hahn Does All Under Heaven China Heritage Quarterly Australia National University ISSN 1833 8461 Retrieved 2018 07 30 a b Lee Leo Ou fan Li Oufan Shanghai Modern The Flowering of a New Urban Culture in China 1930 1945 Interpretations of Asia Series Harvard University Press 1999 ISBN 067480550X 9780674805507 p 377 a b In the new China old problems remain Associated Press at the St Petersburg Times 2003 02 16 Archived from the original on 2005 05 31 Retrieved 2018 07 30 Taras Grescoe 14 June 2016 Shanghai Grand Forbidden Love and International Intrigue in a Doomed World St Martin s Press pp 3 ISBN 978 1 250 04971 1 Further reading editEnglish Hahn Emily Mr Pan Doubleday Garden City New York 1942 Hutt Jonathan La Maison d Or The Sumptuous world of Shao Xunmei East Asian History 21 June 2001 pp 111 142 Ho Yeon Sung A Comparative Study of Shao Xunmei s Poetry Ohio State University 2003 of Prof Kirk Denton a novel based on a fictional sister of Shao Weina Di Randell The Last Rose of Shanghai 2021 The Last Rose of ShanghaiChinese Li Guangde Shao Xunmei de shi yu shilun The poetry and poetic critiques of Shao Xunmei Huzhou Shizhuan Xuebao 1985 22 Sheng Peiyu Yi Shao Xunmei Remembering Shao Xunmei Wenjiao Ziliao Materials on Literary Education Nanjing Normal College 1982 No 5 p 47 72 Sheng Peiyu Wo he Shao Xunmei Shao Xunmei and I Huzhou Shizhuan Xuebao Academic Journal of the Huzhoa Normal College 1984 No 5 p 47 72 Su Xuelin 蘇雪林 Tuijiadang pai de Shao Xunmei 颓加荡派的邵洵美 The Decadent School s Shao Xunmei Er sanshi niandai zuojia yu zuopin 二三十年代作家與作品 Authors and Works of the Twenties and Thirties Guangdong chunbanshe Taipei 1980 p 148 155 Wen Xing 文星 Tuifeishiren Shao Xunmei 頹廢詩人邵洵美 Ming Pao Hong Kong April 5 1974 Zhang Kebiao Haishang Caizi Gao Chuban Ji Shao Xunmei A Shanghai Talent Getting Involved in Publishing Remembering Shao Xunmei Shanghai Wenshi Shanghai Literature and History 1989 No 2 p 4 10 邵洵美 一个被严重低估的文化人 南方人物周刊 zh 2012 12 21 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shao Xunmei amp oldid 1180965232, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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