Jump to content

Chen Yingzhen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by AnomieBOT (talk | contribs) at 15:27, 5 November 2020 (Substing templates: {{Chinese-name}} per WP:Templates for discussion/Log/2020 October 3#Template:Catalan name. Report errors at User talk:AnomieBOT/TFDTemplateSubster.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Chen Yingzhen
Chen Yingzhen and his wife in Taipei, March 2003
Chen Yingzhen and his wife in Taipei, March 2003
Native name
陳映真
BornChen Yongshan (陳永善)
(1937-11-08)8 November 1937
Shinchiku Prefecture, Japanese Taiwan
Died22 November 2016(2016-11-22) (aged 79)
Beijing, China
Occupationauthor
LanguageChinese, English, Japanese
NationalityTaiwanese
Alma materCheng Kung Senior High School
Tamkang University
Period1959–2016
Genreprose, novel
Subjectleft-wing politics, humanitarianism, Marxism, modernism
Literary movementTaiwan Nativist Literature
Spouse
陳麗娜
(m. 1977; "his death" is deprecated; use "died" instead. 2016)

Chen Yingzhen (Chinese: 陳映真; 8 November 1937 – 22 November 2016) was a Taiwanese author. Chen is also notable for having served a prison sentence for "subversive activity" between 1968 and 1973. He was active as writer from the late 1950s until his death in 2016.

The Collected Works of Chen Yingzhen is 15 volumes long, and was published in 1988.[1] Some of his stories were also included in Lucien Miller's Exiles at Home.[2]

Biography

Chen Yingzhen was born Chen Yongshan in northern Taiwan,[3][4] the son of a devout Christian minister.[5] Despite this, he never was a Christian himself while growing up.[5] He was raised in what became Zhunan, Miaoli, with a twin brother, who died in 1946.[6] Chen was arrested in 1968 by the Kuomintang for "leading procommunist activities", and was imprisoned until 1973.[5] Chen was again imprisoned in 1979, shortly before the Kaohsiung Incident.[3] He died in Beijing on 22 November 2016 at the age of 79 following a long illness.[4]

Style

Some critics have seen Chen's work as featuring important moral dimensions while lacking technical proficiency. For example, Joseph S. M. Lau said of Chen, "his output is relatively small and his style is at times embarrassing, yet he is a very important writer... Almost alone among his contemporaries, he addresses himself to some of the most sensitive problems of his time."[7]

Thought

Chen was a supporter of the notion of a unifying Chinese national identity in Taiwan, as opposed to "nativist" writers like Zhang Liangze [zh], who support the development of a native Taiwanese consciousness.[8] Chen contributed to several journals as an editor and writer,[3][2] and was "regarded as Taiwan's utmost representative leftist intellectual."[9] Jeffrey C. Kinkley noted in 1990 that Chen was "considered by many Chinese readers and critics in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and overseas to be Taiwan's greatest author."[1]

Portrait

References

  1. ^ a b Kinkley, Jeffrey C. (July 1990). "From Oppression to Dependency: Two Stages in the Fiction of Chen Yingzhen". Modern China. 16 (3): 243–268. doi:10.1177/009770049001600301. JSTOR 189226.
  2. ^ a b Lupke, Christopher (23 November 2016). "Chen Yingzhen (1937-2016)". Ohio State University. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  3. ^ a b c Tsu, Jing (2016). "Chen Yingzhen (1938– )". Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism. doi:10.4324/9781135000356-REM1464-1. ISBN 9781135000356.
  4. ^ a b Chang, Shu-ling; Cheng, Sabine; Chang, S. C. (22 November 2016). "Minister, friends mourn death of writer Chen Ying-chen". Central News Agency. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  5. ^ a b c Wang, David Der-Wei (Autumn 1998). "Three Hungry Women". Boundary 2. 25 (3). Duke University Press: 66–67. doi:10.1525/california/9780520231405.001.0001. ISBN 9780520238732. JSTOR 303588.
  6. ^ Xu, Nancan (2014). "Back alleys: the creative journey of Chen Yingzhen". Inter-Asia Cultural Studies. 15 (3). Translated by Liu, Petrus: 342–348. doi:10.1080/14649373.2014.950479.
  7. ^ Quoted in Kinkley (1990), 243–244. See Kinkley, Jeffrey C. (July 1990). "From Oppression to Dependency: Two Stages in the Fiction of Chen Yingzhen". Modern China. 16 (3): 243–268. doi:10.1177/009770049001600301. JSTOR 189226.
  8. ^ Kleeman, Faye Yuan (2003). Under an Imperial Sun: Japanese Colonial Literature of Taiwan and the South. University of Hawaii Press. p. 79. ISBN 0-8248-2592-6.
  9. ^ Zheng, Hong-sheng (2014). "Chen Yingzhen and Taiwan's "sixties": self-realization of the postwar generation in Taiwan". Inter-Asia Cultural Studies. 15 (3): 455–476. doi:10.1080/14649373.2014.951514.