View source for Anyi Wang ← Anyi Wang You do not have permission to edit this page, for the following reason: The action you have requested is limited to users in one of the groups: Users, Main_Editors. You can view and copy the source of this page: [[Image:Anyi Wang.jpg|250px|thumb]] ==Profile== * '''Name:''' Anyi Wang * '''Chinese:''' 王安忆 * '''Birthdate:''' March 6, 1954 * '''Birthplace:''' Nanjing, China * '''Height:''' * '''Blood Type:''' ==Bio== Wang Anyi represents the generation of writers whose formal education was disrupted by the Cultural Revolution. She is among the most widely read authors of the post-Mao era, a breaker of taboos and a speaker for China's younger generation. Daughter of the famous writer Ru Zhijuan, Wang was born on March 6, 1954 in Nanjing. In 1955, she moved with her mother to Shanghai, where she attended school until 1969. As a member of the "Urban Youth" generation that was supposed to learn from the peasants, she was sent to the Anhui countryside at the age of sixteen, but managed to leave the commune by joining a local performing arts troupe as a cellist in 1973. After the Cultural Revolution, she returned to Shanghai in 1978 to work for the magazine Childhood. Wang had begun publishing stories in the mid-1970s that were largely based on her personal experiences. They portrayed the humiliations and frustrations in the everyday lives of the back-alley residents of Shanghai or depicted the traditional values that are kept alive in rural areas. After attending the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa in 1983, Wang's fiction moved away from socialist realism and turned towards psychological exploration, such as her "Love Trilogy" (1986-87) that examined female sexuality and marriage. Her characters are not openly rebellious but express their inner feelings through quiet self-confidence and a strong will for survival. In the 1990s, Wang's Shanghai-focused works tapped into a growing surge of nostalgia for pre-Communist Shanghai and cemented her popularity and status. Wang was designated the "Best Female Writer in Modern China" in 1998 and was the head of the official Shanghai Writer's Association for two years. ==Bibliography== * [[Peach Flower in Blossom]] (2004) * [[Fu Ping]] (2001) * [[Temptress Moon]] (screenplay, with Chen Kaige) (1996) * [[Changhen Ge]] (1996) * [[Love Trilogy]] (1986-1987) * [[Love on a Barren Mountain]] (1986-1987) * [[Love in a Small Town]] (1986-1987) * [[Brocade Valley]] (1986-1987) * [[Baotown]] (1985) * [[Lapse of Time]] (1982) * [[Rustling Rain]] (1981) ==Comments== <wp:comments> wp_post_title=Anyi Wang wp_url=http://asianwiki.com/commentsdirectory/ </wp:comments> [[Category:writers]] [[Category:Chinese writers]] {{DEFAULTSORT:Wang, Anyi}} Return to Anyi Wang. Page Discussion View View source History