This paper analyzes the early stage of Guan Lu, the editor of the Chinese women’s magazine “Women's Voice” (before she surreptitiously joined “Women's Voice” as an underground member of the Chinese Communist Party), as a work created by a famous left-wing female poet at that time, and explores her feminist ideas and thoughts. Left-wing thinking.
In the early days, Guan Lu published more than 20 articles on female laborers and women’s ideological emancipation. At the same time, as a keynote of left-wing poets, she created many works centered on themes such as war, colonialism, and imperialism, focusing mainly on criticism of feudalism and the inferior position of men and women under it, true equality between men and women, and the national liberation of semi-colonial China. Guan Lu, a left-wing female poet, believed that women’s liberation should be achieved only after national liberation, as only when the nation is liberated can women achieve true liberation. Guan Lu’s poems and essays had a tremendous impact on the public of that time.