Wang_Anyi

Wang Anyi

Wang Anyi

Chinese writer


Wang Anyi (born 6 March 1954) is a Chinese writer,[1] vice-chair of the China Writers Association since 2006, and professor in Chinese Literature at Fudan University since 2004.

Quick Facts Born, Language ...

Wang widely write novels, novellas, short stories and essays with diverse themes and topics. The majority of her works are set in Shanghai, where she lived and worked for the majority of her life. Wang also regularly writes about the countryside in Anhui, where she was "sent down" during the Cultural Revolution. Her works have been translated into English, German and French, and studied as zhiqing (educated youth), xungen (roots-searching), Haipai (Shanghai style), and dushi (urban, cosmopolitan) literature.[1]

Early life

Wang was born in Nanjing in 1954, but moved to Shanghai with her mother when she was a year old. Under the influence of her parents, she liked literature very much in childhood. After the Cultural Revolution, her parents were sent to labor camps. She read a large number of foreign works, Including Turgenev, Tolstoy, Gorky, Pushkin, Tazma and other writers classic works.[2]

Career

In 1969, after graduating from middle school, Wang was "sent down" to the countryside of Wuhe County, Anhui—then an impoverished province plagued by famine. The rustication experience traumatized her. In the late 1980s, Wang said: "When I left, I left with the feelings of escaping from hell."[3]

During the lonely years in the countryside, "reading books and writing in my diary became even more precious to me".[4] Wang had hoped to enter a university as a Worker-Peasant-Soldier student but without a recommendation her dream was not realized. However, as she could play the accordion, in 1972 she found a position in the Xuzhou Song and Dance Cultural Troupe to play the cello. During her spare time she continued to write, and began to publish short stories in 1976. She was permitted to return to Shanghai in 1978 and worked as an editor of the literature magazine Childhood (儿童时代).[3]

In 1980 Wang became a professional writer, and that year received training from the China Writers Association at the Lu Xun Literary Institute. In the same year, her first reputed work -- "And the Rain Patters On" won the Beijing Literature Prize, which started her fictionalized self—Wenwen (雯雯) series stories. Her earlier works focused on individual experiences rather than the collective, politics-oriented literature advocated by the state.[5] In 1982 and 1983, her short story "The Destination" and novella Lapse of Time won national awards. In Lapse of Time, Wang shifted from emotional intensity in her previous work to the mundane day-to-day lives. But it was a 1983 trip to Iowa City, Iowa, United States for the International Writing Program, with her mother Ru Zhijuan, that redefined her career. There she met writer Chen Yingzhen, a social activist and Chinese nationalist from Taiwan, whose humanistic worldview and encouragement strongly influenced her.[6] This experience "led to the profound discovery that she was indeed Chinese and to the decision to 'write on China' when she returned". In her first major work after the trip, the award-winning novella Baotown (1985), Wang focused on the culture of rural China, drawing from her own experience. The benevolent child protagonist is contrasted with selfish, prejudicial, cruel and close-minded adult villagers, and Ying Hong remarked that Wang used "words that carry not the least hint of subjectivity she casually tosses forth a whole string of 'slices of life'."[7]

Since Baotown, Wang began exploring social taboo subjects. Her three novellas on forbidden carnal love, namely Love on a Barren Mountain (1986), Love in a Small Town (1986), and Brocade Valley (1987), provoked much controversy despite virtually no depictions of sex. Her 1989 novella Brothers made forays into the fragile same-sex, non-sexual female bond. However, in a 1988 interview Wang stated her "purpose and theme" have been consistently about man and love.

During 1990s, the literal technics of Wang have been more skilled, and her works "not only reveal social relationships, but some of the basic attributes (natural attributes) of people and their profound constraining power over the fate of individuals.[8]" In 1996, Wang's most famous novel, The Song of Everlasting Sorrow, traces the life story of a young Shanghainese girl from the 1940s all the way till her death after the Cultural Revolution. The novel made Wang's writing reached its peak,[1] and won the most prestigious Mao Dun Literary Prize in 2000 in China. In the story, the protagonist Wang Qiyao "is a metaphor for Shanghai: she maintains her pride and her manners, despite her misery under communist rule."[3] The novel was adapted into a film in 2005, a television series, and a stage play. The success of The Song of Everlasting Sorrow earned the reputation of Wang as the successor of Eileen Chang,[1] and both of their writings are about the civil lives in Shanghai, which are known as Haipai (Shanghai School).

A novella and six of her stories have been translated and collected in an anthology, Lapse of Time. In his preface to that collection, Jeffrey Kinkley notes that Wang is a realist whose stories "are about everyday urban life" and that the author "does not stint in describing the brutalising density, the rude jostling, the interminable and often futile waiting in line that accompany life in the Chinese big city".

Wang has tried other forms of writing. In 1996 Wang co-wrote the period film Temptress Moon with director Chen Kaige and Shu Kei. In 2007, she translated Elizabeth Swados' My Depression: A Picture Book from English.

Wang has been a professor in Fudan University since 2000s.[9]

Narrative style

Wang likes to combine history with current facts to create, and integrate historical cultural into the narrative of the novel. "The Song of Everlasting Sorrow" is actually a poem written by Bai Juyi, a poet in the Tang dynasty, about the love between Tang Xuanzong and Concubine Yang. Based on a piece of real news and ancient history, Wang Anyi unfolded another kind of love story, cleverly combining current knowledge and history. On the other hand, Wang Anyi is good at narrative methods that see the ‘big’ from the ‘small’. From "Song of Everlasting Regret" to "Kao Gong Ji", she reflects the changes in society and the times through the description of characters.[10]

Hong Zicheng commented that "Among women writers, Wang Anyi is seen as a writer with an exceptionally wide field of vision and the ability to harness many forms of life experience and literary subject matter."[8] The cultural critic, Dai Jinhua, remarked on her literary creation after Wang won the 2017 Newman Prize for Chinese Literature, "Wang Anyi is a good at capturing the miniature drama of mundane lives ... Her world is a gallery of humans, in which you encounter China, the world, and the river of life that is enduring and sublime, yielding yet constantly invigorated ... She does not write about ordinary people in a general sense; she writes about laborers, and the daily lives of those laborers, regarding their love, fear, life, and death."[11]

Through her writing career, Wang transitioned from experience-based writing to more strategic narration. In a 1991 interview, she claims that her early works only describes scenes, without the narrator's presence. Late on, she transitioned from objective narration to more subjective narration.[12] Wang is often recognized as a feminist writer,[13] although she does not self-identify as a feminist. "Critics often says that I am under the influence of feminism. They say I am disappointed in man, which I am not."[12] She says in the same interview, however, that she "cannot treat women as objects" and she "dislikes female characters that does everything to please men."[12]

Personal life

Wang's mother, Ru Zhijuan (茹志鹃), is a novelist while her father, Wang Xiaopin (王啸平), is a playwright and director. She has an elder sister, Wang Annuo (王安诺), who is a former editor of a literary magazine and a younger brother, Wang Anwei (王安桅), who does Literary and Art research.

Wang is married to Li Zhang (李章) who is an editor of Shanghai Music Publishing House.[14]

Works translated into English

More information Year, Chinese title ...

Major awards


References

  1. Di, Bai; Lin, Huang (2013). "Wang Anyi". In Moran, Thomas; Xu, (Dianna) Ye (eds.). Chinese Fiction Writers, 1950-2000. Detroit, MI: Gale, a Cengage Company. ISBN 978-0-7876-9645-0.
  2. "王安忆:扎根时代的文学之旅_半月谈网". www.banyuetan.org. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
  3. Leung, Laifong (1994). "Wang Anyi: Restless Explorer". Morning Sun: Interviews with Chinese Writers of the Lost Generation. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 177–87. ISBN 978-1-56324-093-5.
  4. Chinese Writers on Writing. Trinity University Press. 2010. ISBN 978-1-59534-063-4.
  5. Wang, Lingzhen (2003). "Wang Anyi". In Mostow, Joshua S. (ed.). The Columbia Companion to Modern East Asian Literature. Columbia University Press. pp. 592–7. ISBN 978-0-231-11314-4.
  6. Years of Sadness. Cornell University. 2009. ISBN 978-1-933947-47-1.
  7. Ying Hong (1991). "Wang Anyi and Her Fiction". In Ying Bian (ed.). The Time Is Not Yet Ripe: Contemporary China's Best Writers and Their Stories. Translated by Katharina A. Byrne. Foreign Languages Press. pp. 217–24. ISBN 978-7-119-00742-7.
  8. Hong, Zicheng (2007). A History of Contemporary Chinese Literature. Translated by Day, Michael. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. p. 410. ISBN 978-90-04-15754-5.
  9. Dai, Jinhua (2018-01-03). "Wang Anyi". Chinese Literature Today. 6 (2). Translated by Ping Zhu: 6–7. doi:10.1080/21514399.2017.1374807. S2CID 218552809.
  10. 王, 安亿; 凡亚, 斯特; 秦, 立德 (1991-05-21). "从现实人生的体验到叙述策略的转型 -- 一份关于王安忆十年小时创作的访谈录". 当代作家评论. 1991–6: 28–35 via 中文科技期刊数据库.
  11. 张, 浩 (2006-07-31). "从私人空间到公共空间 -- 论王安忆创作中的女性空间建构". 中国文化研究. 2001 (4): 159–163 via WANFANG DATA.
  12. "王安忆:文学能使人生变得有趣_中国作家网". www.chinawriter.com.cn. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
  13. The Rose Colored Dinner: New Works by Contemporary Chinese Women Writers. Joint Publishing. 1988. ISBN 978-962-04-0615-7.
  14. Wang, Anyi (15 March 2018). "Mother". Frontiers of Literary Studies in China. 12 (1): 5–19. doi:10.3868/s010-007-018-0002-5.
  15. The Little Restaurant. Better Link Press. 2010. ISBN 978-1-60220-225-2.
  16. The Book of Shanghai, Comma Press, 2020.
  17. Renditions (39), Spring 1993.
  18. Renditions (27 & 28), 1987.
  19. Modern Chinese Writers: Self-Portrayals. M. E. Sharpe. 1992. ISBN 978-0-87332-817-3.
  20. Red Is Not the Only Color: Contemporary Chinese Fiction on Love and Sex Between Women, Collected Stories. Rowman & Littlefield. 2001. ISBN 978-0-7425-1137-8.
  21. Dragonflies: Fiction by Chinese Women in the Twentieth Century. Cornell University. 2003. ISBN 978-1-885445-15-5.
  22. Wang, Anyi. "I Love Bill". Frontiers of Literary Studies in China. 12 (1): 43–65. doi:10.3868/so10-007-018-0004-9 (inactive 31 January 2024).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of January 2024 (link)
  23. Wang, Anyi (2018). "The Troupe". Frontiers of Literary Studies in China. 12 (4): 645–673. doi:10.3868/s010-007-018-0030-2.
  24. One China, Many Paths. Verso Books. 2003. ISBN 978-1-85984-537-0.
  25. Wang, Anyi. "Match Made in Heaven". Frontiers of Literary Studies in China. 12 (1): 20–42. doi:10.3868/so10-007-018-0003-2 (inactive 31 January 2024).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of January 2024 (link)
  26. Street Wizards and Other New Folklore. Foreign Languages Press. 2009. ISBN 978-7-119-05749-1.
  27. Chinese Literature, September–October 2000.
  28. Renditions (69), Spring 2008.
  29. The Mystified Boat: Postmodern Stories from China. University of Hawaiʻi Press. 2003. ISBN 978-0-8248-2799-1.
  30. Wang, Anyi (2019). Fu Ping. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231193238.
  31. Under the Eaves: Selected Short Stories by Contemporary Writers from Shanghai(I). Better Link Press. 2008. ISBN 978-1-60220-207-8.
  32. Keep Running, Little Brother. Foreign Languages Press. 2014. ISBN 978-7-119-09311-6.
  33. How Far Is Forever and More Stories by Women Writers. Foreign Languages Press. 2008. ISBN 978-7-119-05436-0.
  34. Wang, Anyi (15 June 2019). "A Girls' Trip". Frontiers of Literary Studies in China. 13 (2): 262–297. doi:10.3868/s010-008-019-0014-0.
  35. The Great Masque and More Stories of Life in the City. Foreign Languages Press. 2008. ISBN 978-7-119-05437-7.
  36. Renditions (86), Autumn 2016.
  37. Wang, Anyi (15 June 2019). "The Rescue Truck". Frontiers of Literary Studies in China. 13 (2): 298–311. doi:10.3868/s010-008-019-0015-7.
  38. A Voice from the Beyond. Foreign Languages Press. 2014. ISBN 978-7-119-09309-3.
  39. By the River: Seven Contemporary Chinese Novellas. University of Oklahoma Press. 2016. ISBN 978-0-8061-5404-6.

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