Hàn Mặc Tử

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Hàn Mặc Tử
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Hàn Mặc Tử
Born (1912-09-22)September 22, 1912
Đồng Hới District, Quảng Bình Province, Vietnam
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Qui Nhơn, Bình Định Province, Vietnam
Resting place Qui Nhơn, Bình Định Province, Vietnam
Occupation poet
Language Vietnamese
Nationality Vietnamese
Ethnicity Vietnamese people
Citizenship Vietnamese people

Nguyễn Trọng Trí, penname Hàn Mặc Tử (September 22, 1912 - November 11, 1940) was a Vietnamese poet. He was the most celebrated Vietnamese Catholic literary figure during the colonial era.[1]

He was born Nguyễn Trọng Trí, at Lệ Mỹ Village, Đồng Hới District, Quảng Bình Province.[2] His pen names included: Minh Duệ, Phong Trần, Lệ Thanh, and finally Hàn Mặc Tử,[3] by which name is known today. He grew up in a poor family, his father having died when he was young. He showed poetic talent at a young age. When he met Phan Bội Châu, he received encouragement and praise that made him well-known.[3] He contracted leprosy in 1937, and was finally hospitalized at Quy Hòa Hospital in September 1940, where he died two months later.

His many poems addressed to real or fictive women - in the manner of Giacomo Leopardi in the West, for example - remain popular, and he is known as a love poet in Vietnam. His poems on folk subjects are also well-known.

Poetry

Hàn Mặc Tử's early poems - praised by Phan Bội Châu - are famous for their purity of diction and form, and show him to be a fluent Classicist with a strong interest in realistic subjects. Subsequently, his poetry showed the influence of French Symbolism, and after he fell sick, became increasingly violent and despondent. Personal despair combined with the search for poetic novelty led him to found the short-lived "Chaos" (Loạn) or "Mad" (Ðiên) school of poetry. More than a love poet, Hàn Mặc Tử was a Modernist, who sought to fuse, in a new poetic language, disparate traditions and experiences. Beginning with poems that refreshed the Classical tradition, he went on to absorb the French influence, which he directed toward the turbulence of his own painful history. His language, increasingly tortured, remained both Classical and innovative throughout; and though a Catholic, he made frequent use of Buddhist ideas and imagery.[citation needed]

Collections

  • Gái Quê (Country Girls) 1936, the only collection published during his lifetime
  • Chơi Giữa Mùa Trăng (Playing in the Moon Season)
  • Xuân Như Ý (Ideal Spring)
  • Ðau Thương (Suffering)
  • Thượng Thanh Khí (Fresh Air Above)
  • Cẩm Châu Duyên (Cẩm Châu Coast).

Poetry in English

Hàn Mặc Tử's poetry has not appeared in credible English translations. His complex late style compounds the problems related to translating Vietnamese poetry into English; while the purity of his early style presents another set of challenges.[4]

References

  1. Charles Keith Catholic Vietnam: A Church from Empire to Nation 2012 - Page 135 "... novelists like Hồ Biểu Chánh.84 Probably the most celebrated Vietnamese Catholic literary figure during the colonial era was the poet Nguyễn Trọng Trí, better known as Hàn Mặc Tử. Tử was born in Quảng bình in 1912, but he moved often due ... "
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