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Xu Dishan | |
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許地山 | |
Born | 許贊堃 February 3, 1894 |
Died | 4 August 1941 | (aged 47)
Academic background | |
Alma mater | Yenching University, Columbia University, Oxford University |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Sanskrit language, Chinese studies, Indology, comparative religion, folklore |
Institutions | Yenching University, Peking University, University of Hong Kong |
Notable students | Eileen Chang |
Xu Dishan (simplified Chinese: 许地山; traditional Chinese: 許地山; pinyin: Xǔ Dìshān; Wade–Giles: Hsü Ti-shan; given name: 贊堃; Zànkūn; pen name: Luo Huasheng; Chinese: 落華生; pinyin: Luò Huáshēng; Wade–Giles: Lo Hua-sheng; 3 February 1893 – 4 August 1941) was a Chinese author, translator and folklorist. He received his education in China, the United States, Britain, and India; while in school, he studied diverse topics in religion, philosophy, and literature. Upon his return to China, he was an active member of the May Fourth Movement, and published literary journals with his academic peers. He wrote a plethora of academic and fictitious works during his life, many of which he published under the pen name Luo Huasheng. He was best known for his short stories that focus on the people from the southern provinces of China and Southeast Asia. The protagonists of his stories were often women. Xu Dishan was a strong proponent of the Latinization Movement and believed that writing Chinese with a phonetic alphabet would greatly increase literacy. He died at age 47 from a heart attack.