Hằng Phương

Hằng Phương
Born
Lê Hằng Phương

September 9, 1908
làng Nông Sơn, xã Điện Thọ, Điện Bàn, Quảng Nam Province,
DiedFebruary 2, 1983 (1983-02-03) (aged 74)
Vietnam
NationalityVietnamese
OccupationPoet

Hằng Phương (Điện Bàn, 9 September 1908 – 2 February 1983) was a Vietnamese intimist poet.[1]

She was born into an educated Confucian family and married writer Vũ Ngọc Phan.[2] Her daughter is the painter Vũ Giáng Hương.[3][4][5][6]

Works

[edit]
  • Hương xuân (1943, in collaboration with Anh Thơ, Vân Đài, Mộng Tuyết)
  • Một mùa hoa (1960)
  • Chim én bay xa (1962)
  • Mùa gặt "Harvest" (1961)
  • Hương đất nước (1974)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Hữu Ngọc, Françoise Corrèze - Fleurs de pamplemoussier: femmes et poésie au Vietnam Page 71 1984 "Hang Phuong ou la poésie « intimiste » Née dans l'ancienne province de Quam Nam, Hang Phuong (1908-1983) est issue d'une famille de lettrés confucéens et patriotes. Certains traits de caractères familiaux permettent de mieux la .."
  2. ^ Tham Seong Chee -Essays on Literature and Society in Southeast Asia 1981 Page 329 "A place should also be reserved for the poetesses of Vietnam and the poets of the Resistance in South Vietnam. Among the most well-known poetesses are: Mrs. Van Dai, Mrs. Anh Tho, and Mrs. Hang Phuong." .. Hang Phuong 1908) is the wife of Vu Ngoc Phan, the literary critic, and native of the province of Quang Nam. She has published two collections of poetry: Huong Xuan ("The Odour of Spring"), 1942, and Mua Gat ("The Harvest"), 1961.
  3. ^ The central highlands: a North Vietnamese journal of life on the ... Page 13 Cao Đài Lê, Lady Borton - 2004 "Her father is Vu Ngoc Phan, a well known writer; her mother is the poet Hang Phuong."
  4. ^ Đình Hoà Nguyêñ - From the city inside the Red River: a cultural memoir 1999 Page 32 " and such other prominent intellectuals as Bui Ky (a traditional academic) and Hang Phuong (a lady poet)."
  5. ^ Van Thao Trinh Les compagnons de route de Hô Chi Minh: Histoire d'un engagement . 2004 Page 224 "Il évoque irrésistiblement les souvenirs de l'écrivain Vu Ngoc Phan et sa femme Hang Phuong : « Votre épouse."
  6. ^ Seminar on Vietnamese Studies - Page 380 Čhulālongkō̜nmahāwitthayālai. Sathāban ʻĒchīa - 1997 "If before the Revolution, Anh Tho, Hang Phuong, Van Dai were rare phenomenons, up to the anti-French Resistance their "