Jiang Zilong | |
---|---|
蒋子龙 | |
Born | August 1941 Hebei province, China |
Nationality | Chinese |
Occupation | Author |
Jiang Zilong (simplified Chinese: 蒋子龙; traditional Chinese: 蔣子龍; pinyin: Jiǎng Zilóng; born August 1941) is a Chinese author of fiction and essays. He is known as the founder of 'reform literature' which deals with China’s policy of reform and opening up.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Biography
Jiang was born in August 1941 in Hebei province, north China. After graduating from a technical school, he was assigned to the Tianjin Casting and Forging Centre Factory (later renamed Tianjin Heavy Machinery Factory). He was enlisted in the military in 1960, demobilised in 1965 and then rejoined the factory where he rose to the rank of director.[1][2][4][5]
After publishing many essays and stories during his tenure at the factory, Jiang wrote a novella titled A Day in the Life of the Chief of the Electrical Equipment Bureau, which was published in the journal People’s Literature in 1976. The story was condemned as “poisonous weed” for de-emphasising class struggle and praising Deng Xiaoping who was out of favour at the time. People's Literature drafted and published a self-criticism for Jiang, and he was denounced in front of a large audience at a theatre in Tianjin. The death of Mao Zedong in September 1976 meant that Jiang escaped further criticism.[2]
Jiang's 1979 novella Manager Qiao Assumes Office addressed the problems of state-run factories and the need for modernisation. It gained national attention and led him to become known as the founder of 'reform literature' supporting Deng Xiaoping's policy of reform and opening up, although Jiang has stated that he does not recognise that label.[3] After becoming a full-time writer in the early 1980s, he published several more novellas dealing with the same subject matter, including sequels to Manager Qiao Assumes Office.[2]
Jiang has also written books about other subjects including Snake God (1986), which focuses on the Cultural Revolution, and Peasant Empire (2008), which took 11 years to write and tracks the changes in rural life in China from the 1950s to the early 2000s.[3] Peasant Empire won the 2008 Erdos Literature Award.[7] In March 2019, the English translation of Peasant Empire was published by Alain Charles Asia under the title Empires of Dust.[8]
Jiang has served as honorary chairman of the Tianjin Writers Association and vice chairman of the fifth, sixth and seventh sessions of the China Writers Association.[1]
In 2018, the Party Central Committee and the State Council awarded Jiang the title of 'Pioneer of Reform'.[5][6]
Notable works
- A Day in the Life of the Chief of the Electrical Equipment Bureau (1976)
- Manager Qiao Assumes Office (1979)
- A Sequel to Manager Qiao (1980)
- The Pioneers (1981)
- Diary of a Factory Secretary (1981)
- All Colours of the Rainbow (1983)
- The Sad Song of Yan and Zhao (1985)
- Snake God (1986)
- Peasant Empire (2008)
Works in translation (English)
References
- 1 2 3 "蒋子龙". chinawriter.com.cn.
- 1 2 3 4 "蒋子龙:改革文学的扛旗者". dangjian.com.
- 1 2 3 "蒋子龙:不是我选择了改革,是改革选择了我". ydyl.people.com.cn.
- 1 2 "蒋子龙:散文的时代". sohu.com.
- 1 2 3 "蒋子龙:我与文学结下的不解之缘". thepaper.cn.
- 1 2 "关于改革开放杰出贡献拟表彰对象的公示". xinhuanet.com.
- ↑ "2008年度鄂尔多斯文学奖揭晓 蒋子龙获大奖". book.sina.com.cn.
- ↑ Jiang, Zilong (2019). Empires of Dust. London: Alain Charles Asia Ltd. ISBN 978-1-910760-33-8.
- ↑ Jiang, Zilong (1986). All the Colours of the Rainbow (1st ed.). Beijing, China: Sinolingua. ISBN 0-8351-1022-2. OCLC 11358099.
- ↑ Jiang, Zilong (1999). Selected Stories by Jiang Zilong. Beijing: Foreign Languages Teaching & Research Press. ISBN 7-5600-1677-4. OCLC 44871274.
- ↑ Zilong, Jiang (2018). Empires of Dust. London, UK: ACA Publishing Ltd; Beijing, China. ISBN 1-910760-33-1. OCLC 1083465808.