Lu Xun (September 25, 1881-October 19, 1936) was a great modern Chinese writer, ideologist, revolutionary, and fighter for democracy. His works were rich and varied, including novels, essays, poems, essays, translation, and many other fields. Lu Xun's representative works include A Madman's Diary, The True Story of Ah Q, New Stories, Hesitation, Canopy Collection, Scream, Weeds, etc. The Madman's Diary was one of Lu Xun's most famous novels and was hailed as the foundation of modern Chinese novels. Lu Xun's hometown was Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province, China. He was born in a scholarly family in Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province, and received a good education since childhood. Lu Xun was deeply influenced by Chinese traditional culture as well as Western literature and ideas. He was good at using satire, sarcasm and sarcasm to reveal social reality and human nature problems from a unique perspective and profound thoughts, becoming one of the outstanding representatives of modern Chinese literature.