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Shoko: His head is not bald.
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The origin of the camel Shoko is briefly described as follows:
The warlords were fighting, and when Xiangzi went out of the city, he encountered rebellious soldiers, the car was lost, and the people were also arrested. Later, when the warlord was defeated, Xiangzi saw the opportunity to escape, and secretly took three camels and sold them for thirty yuan. After Shoko escaped, she fell seriously ill.
In a coma, people heard him always chattering about camels, so they gave him the nickname Camel Xiangzi.
Camel Shoko's setting:
Since he came to the city, he has been "Xiangzi", as if he has no surname at all; Nowadays, "camel" is placed above "Xiangzi", and no one cares what his surname is. Whether there is a surname or not, he himself doesn't care. However, the three cattle had only exchanged so many dollars, and he had fallen into a nickname, which he felt was a bit of a big deal.
Chinese generally believe that a person's name is not only a symbol that he represents in society, but also to a certain extent hints at the good fortune of the whole life situation.
There is no surname, and Xiangzi himself doesn't care, from a literary point of view, there are three meanings: first, Xiangzi does not represent a person, but represents a group, representing the masses at the bottom of society; Second, the society at that time was indifferent to a low-level worker and did not care about his dignity as a "human being"; The third is that Shoko himself has become numb and doesn't care about it.
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Description of the appearance of Camel Shoko:
The head is not very large, with round eyes, a fleshy nose, two short and thick eyebrows, the head is always shaved and shiny, there is no extra sail on the cheeks, and the neck is almost as thick as the head; The face is always red, and the most bright thing is a small scar between the cheekbone and the right ear.
Xiangzi Profile: Xiangzi is the protagonist of Lao She's work "Camel Xiangzi". Shoko is from the countryside, and after he pulled a rented foreign car, he decided to buy a car and pull it himself and become an independent laborer, but this wish was finally completely shattered after many setbacks.
He lost any desire and confidence in life, and fell from being motivated and strong to being willing to degenerate: the original upright and kind Xiangzi was crushed by the millstone of life. Shoko has always been an out-and-out masochist :
From the heartfelt resistance to abuse at the beginning, to the slow acceptance from the heart, until it finally becomes a kind of enjoyment.
Examining Xiangzi's mental condition from the perspective of "sadism and masochism" can not only clearly see the transformation process in the depths of Xiangzi's soul, but also essentially excavate the deep reasons for Xiangzi's inner change from "anti-abuse" to "abuse" to "sadism", as well as the process of human degradation. This tragedy powerfully exposes the crime of turning people into ghosts in the old society, and it is also a satire on the pathology of the society at that time.
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No. Xiangzi in Lao She's "Camel Xiangzi" is a strong young farmer who, after losing his parents and land, is forced to run to the city and work as a rickshaw driver in the people and car factory run by Liu Si. The competitive and strong Xiangzi relied on his strength to pull the car to make money, hoping that he could buy a beautiful foreign car, no longer be angry with the car man, and be one"Liberal coachman"。
He went out early and returned late, endured hunger and cold, worked hard in the wind and rain for 3 years, and finally saved enough 100 yuan to buy a new car.
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The Shoko in Camel Shoko is generally bald, and he is a character who appears in this dream box as a bald character.
The backdrop world in Camel Xiangzi is the dark, deformed, and unbalanced old Chinese society, where the people live in poverty, and Xiangzi is only a representative of the vast number of toiling people. Although they have a certain freedom, they have to run for a living, and poverty deprives them of the pitiful freedom they have. >>>More
"Shoko the Camel" mainly tells the tragic story of Shoko as a rickshaw driver who goes from being aggressive to being passive and degenerate. >>>More
I don't have time to write that long.
The overall framework of the character's experience.
Shoko's three ups and downs. >>>More
The excerpt from the famous sentence of "Camel Xiangzi" is as follows: >>>More