From "Song of the Open Road" by Walt Whitman (Favorite Poem Project)

From "Song of the Open Road" by Walt Whitman (Favorite Poem Project)

Introduction to Xu Xing

Background and Occupation

  • Xu Xing introduces himself as a free artist, filmmaker, and writer from Beijing, China.
  • He mentions that his fiction writing covers a wide range of subjects, while his documentary films focus specifically on modern Chinese history.

Connection to Poetry

  • Xu shares his admiration for a particular poem he fell in love with during his teenage years, drawing parallels to a Tang poem by Wang Bo.
  • He notes that although the two poems differ in content, they share a similar spirit.

Personal Experience During the Cultural Revolution

Isolation and Political Awakening

  • Xu recounts being left alone at home during the Cultural Revolution while his parents were reeducated in the countryside and siblings sent away.
  • This isolation led him to question propaganda, which was considered dangerous at that time.

Consequences of Independent Thinking

  • At age fifteen, after falling in love for the first time, he wrote a letter expressing his political thoughts instead of romantic feelings.
  • The letter was turned into a teacher (who had been a policeman), leading to Xu's arrest due to its counter-revolutionary content.
Video description

From "Song of the Open Road" by Walt Whitman, read by Xu Xing (Filmmaker and Writer, Beijing, China), as part of the Favorite Poem Project.