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I've read the book "Camel Shoko", but I haven't read it all. It's probably a story of turning from a "brute" to a "man", and then from a "man" to a "brute", and I still remember some that I hope will help you.
Shoko started out as a brute who could only pull a cart, and he saved money for several years to buy a new car, but the new car was arrested within a few days.
Later, Shoko became less diligent than before, so he slowly learned to think like a human being.
But the wiser a person is, the faster he will fall.
In the end, Shoko degenerated into a brute again, and he continued to survive until he contracted a venereal disease.
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"Camel Xiangzi" realistically depicts the tragic fate of a rickshaw driver in Beijing. 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. He is light and strong, just the age of life; He is also diligent and hardworking, and does not hesitate to use all his strength to achieve this goal.
Inspired and supported by strong confidence, after three years of hard work, he exchanged his blood and sweat for a foreign car. But it didn't take long for the rebels of the warlord to steal his car; Then the reactionary ** detective defrauded him of his only savings, and the master evaded the spy and caused him to lose his relatively stable job; Tiger Niu's inextricable "love" for him brought tribulation to his body and mind. In the face of one blow after another, he struggled, and still stubbornly wanted to use greater efforts to achieve his dream of life.
But it was all in vain: Tiger Girl's savings were used to buy a car, and soon had to sell it to take care of Tiger Girl's funeral. His wish is "like a ghost, never able to grasp it, and empty of those hardships and grievances"; After many setbacks, it was finally completely shattered.
The suicide of the little Fuzi he loved blew out the last spark of hope in his heart, and he lost any desire and confidence in life, and fell from being motivated and strong to being willing to fall: it turned out that the upright and kind Xiangzi was crushed by the millstone of life. This tragedy is a powerful exposé of the old society's crime of turning people into ghosts.
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We're going to write about this as well. Fast. Written dead.
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"Camel Xiangzi" after reading.
After reading the book "Camel Shoko", I learned what kind of life people lived in the chaotic society of the time. Based on the life of Beijing citizens in the late twenties, this ** takes the bumpy and tragic life of the rickshaw driver Xiangzi as the main plot, profoundly exposes the darkness of old China and indicts the ruling class's deep sympathy for the working people.
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We need to learn from Camel Shoko's spirit of striving for strength at the beginning, but not from his later depravity.
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On the weekend, Lao Tzu read a copy of Lao She's masterpiece "Camel Xiangzi", which tells the story of Xiangzi, an old Beijing rickshaw driver. Shoko has an ideal: to have her own foreign car.
So, with diligence and perseverance, he finally got his wish. However, the good times did not last long, and it was not long before his foreign car was snatched away by soldiers. But he did not lose heart, and bought another foreign car by his own efforts.
But he was so unlucky, and his hard-earned savings were looted again. Repeated like this three times, Shoko could no longer muster the courage to live. He began to play a life, eating, drinking, prostituting and gambling, and completely degenerated into the garbage of the city.
This story is a tragedy, a tragedy through and through. A person who was once industrious and stoic, with his own goals, ended up being reduced to social garbage. In the past, Shoko was kind and simple, honest and honest, and had a positive and tenacious attitude towards life like a camel.
The people around him are all monks for a day and ring the bell for a day, but Xiangzi is not satisfied with the status quo, he works hard for a better life, and struggles, he would rather take great risks to earn a little more money to achieve the life he wants. He is constantly pursuing, pursuing success, and pursuing happiness. However, even this did not change his final tragic end.
Maybe this is the reality, cruel, sad, and helpless. Ideals and reality are always full of contradictions, they are often irreconcilable, yet they exist at the same time. Society is realistic, it does not change for the sake of one's ideals, and it will not be flawless.
People struggle for their ideals, but in the end, they don't always succeed. Just like Shoko, he worked hard in search of a better life, but the ending was so tragic.
I hope the answer to the will work for you.
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Reading "On Practice" has a feeling.
This book was written by the chairman of the Communist Party of China at that time to expose the dogmatism and empiricism of the party from the epistemological viewpoint of Marxism, and this book focuses on the word "practice" to remind people not to stay in the attitude of just thinking about not doing it, or vetoing it if you don't do it. The chairman of this book harshly satirizes those who are ahead of their time or whose thoughts are stuck in the old society, and at the same time teaches us to combine practice and theory in everything we do. Reading this book reminds me of Franklin's "Think and Do", that is, theory and practice, which reminds me that no matter what I do, I must try it first, even if it is a famous celebrity, there will be times when I do something wrong, and only if I do it myself, will I know whether it is good or bad, if I don't even do it, but just give up on hearsay, then this kind of person is ridiculous. >>>More
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