I remember what I read in junior high school were all extracurricular masterpieces, besides, they were written by modern writers such as Zhang Ailing, Lin Yutang, Liang Shiqiu and San Mao.
There is Pu Songling's Strange Tales from a Lonely Studio, and there are also articles in which a hundred schools of thought contend during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period.
China's novels: China's novels come from ancient myths and legends and historical biographies in the pre-Qin and Han dynasties, such as Zuo Zhuan and Historical Records, and the so-called "Two Sima pieces in the Han Dynasty" (Sima Qian and Sima Xiangru).
For the name of the novel, see Zhuangzi.
Foreign articles. "
Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties.
At that time, there were strange novels such as Gan Bao's Searching for the Gods, and novels describing people such as Shi Shuo Xin Yu by Liu Yiqing.
Maturity: Tang and Song Dynasties.
Legends of the Tang Dynasty are classical Chinese novels, including Biography of Li Wa, Biography of Liu Yi and Biography of Huo Xiaoyu.
The mainstream of literature in Ming Dynasty is fiction.
There are Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Water Margin and The Journey to the West.
Novels in Ming Dynasty, Strange Stories from a Lonely Studio and Three Words and Two Beats by Scholars in Qing Dynasty.
Prose: (1) Pre-Qin prose: including essays of various schools of thought and historical prose.
Hundred schools of thought's essays are mainly argumentative, such as The Analects of Confucius, Mencius, Zhuangzi, Han Feizi, Xunzi, Tao Te Ching, Lu Chunqiu and Warring States Policy.
; Historical prose mainly focuses on historical themes, and all articles and books describing historical events and historical figures are historical prose, such as Zuo Zhuan.
(2) Prose in the Han Dynasty: Historical Records by Sima Qian in the Western Han Dynasty (3) Prose in the Ming Dynasty: First, there were "seven sons", mainly antique, and later, Tang and Song Dynasties advocated that their works "all flowed out from their chests", the most famous of which was Gui Youguang.
Qing dynasty prose: represented by Tongcheng school, Qing dynasty prose pays attention to the embodiment of "righteousness"
Yao Nai, a representative writer of Tongcheng School, summed up the style of classical Chinese.
There are poems, words and songs.
The famous Yuanqu in Tang poetry and Song poetry.
You should know.
You can be Bai, Du Fu, Su Shi, Guan Hanqing and so on.
In ancient times, there were Yuefu poems, the Book of Songs, Qu Yuan's Li Sao and so on.
There are also some ancient geography books, medical books and so on.
The official appearance you mentioned is one of the representative works of condemnation novels in the late Qing Dynasty.
The other three are Wu Renjian, Travel Notes of Lao Can and Ceng Pu.
Shan Hai Jing has been mentioned by Mr. Lu Xun many times.
China's pre-Qin ancient books.
Generally speaking, it mainly describes ancient myths, geography, products, witchcraft, religion, ancient history, medicine, folk customs, nationalities and so on.
Some scholars believe that Shan Hai Jing is not only a myth, but also an ancient geography, including some overseas mountains, rivers, birds and animals.
The four books and five classics are collectively called the four books and five classics, and the four books refer to The Analects of Confucius, Mencius, Daxue and The Doctrine of the Mean. The Five Classics refer to The Book of Songs, Shangshu, Book of Rites, Zhouyi and Chunqiu.
There are also some art of war handed down, such as Sun Tzu's Art of War, Thirty-six Strategies, Guiguzi, Seven Books of Jason Wu and Gong Wei's Art of War.
China's ancient culture is so profound that it is difficult for me to say it all in one sentence.
what are you reading? It depends on your hobby.
But I think if I were you, I would read Shan Hai Jing, ancient novels I am interested in, Sun Tzu's Art of War and so on.
Have you ever seen a dream of red mansions? This is a must-see, and the literary achievements are very high.
Among the works of a hundred schools of thought contend, I personally prefer Zhuangzi's.
I don't think you should hold very obscure and boring ancient books, which will not see the effect.
For example, let you read Zhouyi now.
The older the times, the more difficult it is for characters to understand, and the greater the gap with modernity.
You may not have mastered the basic sentences of classical Chinese, so it is inevitable to bring translation when reading ancient Chinese. If you don't understand, you don't understand.
So read an ancient book that is closer to modern times.
There is no need to study too advanced literature now.