After the policy of letting a hundred flowers blossom and a hundred flowers blossom was put forward in 1956, Ai Qing dabbled in international themes, including Travel in South America.
South America has white beaches, majestic statues of Jesus, passionate carnivals and mysterious sites of Machu Picchu, which attracts people who like to travel. This book explains the classic tourist attractions in South America in detail, and provides a lot of information on transportation, food, accommodation, shopping and entertainment. It can save your worries for your journey. Traveling to South America, from visa entry to exit and return, from travel knowledge to luggage preparation, this book can be used as your guide to start an unforgettable journey with you.
The editorial department of Witness is a professional writing team composed of a number of full-time authors who have rich travel experience and have been writing tourism books for a long time, and a group of part-time writers who love walking and writing. They have written a number of tourism books such as "Follow Me Series" and "Let's Go Series" which are well received by readers.
Appreciation:
Lyric poems. Author Ai Qing. Published in People's Literature No.11 in 1954 and No.4 in 1957 respectively. Later, it was included in the author's poetry collection "Spring" (People's Literature Publishing House, first edition in June 1956). This group of poems includes 9 poems, including He's Sleeping, A Black Girl Singing, Where Black People Live, Songs of Compassion, Freedom, On a Paper Cigarette Case in Chile, On This Side of the World, Vienna and For pablo neruda.
Through his experiences and feelings during his visit to South China, the poet showed the friendly feelings of the world's peace-loving people towards the people of, reflected the unequal system between people in a society characterized by racial discrimination and disparity between the rich and the poor, and conveyed his keen concern for the world situation and the destiny of mankind.
For example, A Black Girl Singing, by depicting the scene of a black girl singing a lullaby with her little white master, reveals the racial contradiction and class opposition in the colonial world in bright contrast.
In Freedom, the poet grasps the word "freedom" on the dollar and profoundly reveals the essential relationship between "freedom" and "money" in capitalist society: "With it, there is freedom; Without it, there is no freedom. Whoever has more money has more freedom; Whoever has no money has no freedom at all. " The poems are strong in emotion, vivid in image, and use a large number of artistic techniques of metaphor, contrast, contrast and symbol appropriately. The language is simple and philosophical.