Ba Jin (December 12, 1910-December 10, 1993) was originally named Li Yaotang, also known as Fu Gan, Xianping, Sichuan, Leshan, modern China, translator, scholar, and fighter for democracy. Ba Jin was born into a poor family and worked in the Shanghai Public Settlement Bureau of Works before becoming a famous businessman. His representative works included novels such as Home, Spring, Autumn, and other essays such as Old Wang, as well as translated works such as shakespeare's tragedy and the legend of giants. Ba Jin was one of the important representatives of modern Chinese literature and was known as the "literary master". His literary works deeply reflected the history, culture and reality of Chinese society, which had high literary value and thought value. He has won many domestic and international literary awards, including the Nobel Prize in Literature and the French Knight of Literature and Art. Ba Jin died in Leshan City on December 10, 1993 at the age of 84. His legacy was used to support literary education and culture. He made an important contribution to the development of Chinese literature and culture.