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Chen Danyan

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Chen Danyan
陈丹燕
Chen Danyan at Shanghai Book Fair 2008
Chen Danyan at Shanghai Book Fair 2008
Born (1958-12-18) December 18, 1958 (age 65)
Beijing
OccupationWriter
NationalityChinese
Alma materEast China Normal University
Notable worksNine Lives, Shanghai Trilogy

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Chen Danyan (Chinese: 陈丹燕; born 18 December 1958) is a woman writer based in Shanghai, China. Born in Beijing, she moved to Shanghai as a child and her writing revolves around Shanghai and Shanghainese women.[1] She is best known for her trilogy of biographical narratives: Shanghai Memorabilia, Shanghai Princess, and Shanghai Beauty.[2]

Life and work

Chen first published articles in Chinese journals in the 1970s. After studying Chinese literature at East China Normal University (1978–1982) she worked as an editor for the Children's Epoch magazine.

She dealt mainly with Chinese literature until the mid-eighties when she started writing on the life and the emotional world of adolescent girls. The autobiographical novel Nine Lives (1992) dealt with childhood experiences of the Cultural Revolution. She received the UNESCO-Prize for Peace and Tolerance for Nine Lives and was nominated in 1996 for German Youth Literature Prize. Central to her recent work is an exploration of the world of the young generation in China which has grown up as a result of the one-child family policy of the past two decades.

Another focus of her literary career is articles about her hometown of Shanghai.

Selected works

  • 1995 - Nine Lives - a childhood in Shanghai. Zurich.
  • 1996 - Niuyue jiari (New York Holidays). Shanghai. ISBN 7-5321-1475-9
  • 1998 - Shanghai Memorabilia (上海的风花雪月)
  • 1999 - Shanghai Princess (上海的金枝玉叶). Beijing. ISBN 7-5063-1680-3. English edition 2010
  • 2000 - Shanghai Beauty (上海的红颜遗事) - Yao Yao and her mother Shangguan Yunzhu. Beijing. ISBN 7-5063-1680-3
  • 2002 - Yu he ta de zi xing che. Beijing. ISBN 7-5321-2368-5
  • 2006 - Shanghai: China's Bridge to the Future (Cultural China, Man and the Land). Rhinebeck, NY. ISBN 0-7621-0640-9

References

  1. ^ 陈丹燕和她笔下的上海女人们 (in Chinese). Tencent. 8 April 2008. Retrieved 6 September 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Schaffer, Kay; Song, Xianlin (2013). Women Writers in Postsocialist China. Routledge. p. 107. ISBN 9781135091354.