Yan Ge
Yan Ge | |
|---|---|
| Native name | 颜歌 |
| Born | Dai Yuexing December 1984 (age 41) Sichuan, China |
| Occupation | Novelist, writer |
| Language | Standard Chinese, Sichuanese, English |
| Nationality | Chinese |
| Alma mater | Sichuan University |
| Notable works | Our Family |
Yan Ge (Chinese: 颜歌, pinyin: Yán Gē, born December 1984) is the pen name of Chinese writer Dai Yuexing (戴月行, pinyin: Dài Yuèxíng).
Life and career
Yan Ge was born Dai Yuexing in December 1984 in the Pixian district of Chengdu.[1] She began writing at the age of ten and her first book was published when she was 17 years old.[2]
Yan completed a PhD in comparative literature at Sichuan University and is the Chair of the China Young Writers Association. Her writing includes substantial amounts of her native Sichuanese, rather than Standard Chinese.[3] People's Literature (Renmin Wenxue 人民文学) magazine recently chose her – in a list reminiscent of The New Yorker's '20 under 40' – as one of China's twenty future literary masters. In 2012, she was chosen as Best New Writer by the prestigious Chinese Literature Media Prize (华语文学传媒大奖 最佳新人奖). In 2011, she was awarded a visiting scholar position at Duke University.[4] Yan was a guest writer at the Crossing Border Festival in The Hague in November 2012, and has since appeared at numerous literary festivals throughout Europe.[5] She has lived in Dublin with her husband, Daniel, and their child since 2015.[6][7]
Yan has been writing in English in addition to Mandarin and Sichuanese. Her first English book is a 2023 short story collection Elsewhere: stories.[2][8] Reviewer Chelsea Leu wrote
Yan Ge’s English debut is preoccupied with language, its failures, and its relationship to human emotions and the raw reality – the 'food' – of life. ... These stories map out the distance between the head and the gut – the way language can fail to convey the deepest, most visceral facts of life."[8]
Reviewer Sindya Bhanoo wrote that the stories "explore the power of language across the Chinese diaspora to either bring people together or push them apart."[9]
Awards
- 2003 - Chinese Literature Media Award[10]
- 2002 - 1st prize, New Concept Writing Competition[10]
- 2001 - Honored as one of China's Top 10 Young Fiction Writers by the Lu Xun Literature School of the China Writers Association
Publications
- 五月女王 May Queen, 2008 - novel
- 钟腻哥 Sissy Zhong - short story (translated by Nicky Harman)[11]
- 白马 White Horse - novella (translated by Nicky Harman)[12]
- 照妖镜 Demon-Reflecting Mirror- novella[13]
- 平乐镇伤心故事集 Sad Stories of Pingle Township (5 stories including White Horse and Demon-Reflecting Mirror).[14]
- 我们家 Our Family, 2013.
- English translation: The Chilli Bean Paste Clan, translated by Nicky Harman, Balestier Press, 2018; also German and French editions.[15]
- 异兽志 Record of Strange Beasts, 2006.
- English translation: Strange Beasts of China, translated by Jeremy Tiang, Melville House Publishing, 2021.[16]
- Elsewhere: stories, 2023 - short stories. Scribner (US) and Faber (UK) ISBN 978-1-9821-9848-0 (published in English)
References
- ^ Duzan, Brigitte. "Yan Ge 颜歌". www.chinese-shortstories.com.
- ^ a b "Chinese writer Yan Ge finds solace in creating literary worlds". CBC. 11 February 2022.
- ^ "Yan Ge: families, humour, Sichuan, a spicy dish". December 2015.
- ^ Zhong, Na (2018-10-09). "Writing from In-Between: A Conversation with Yan Ge". SupChina. Archived from the original on 2022-04-06. Retrieved 2022-04-26.
- ^ "China". Dutchculture | Centre for international cooperation.
- ^ Abrahamsen, Eric. "Yan Ge". Paper Republic.
- ^ "November 2014: Yan Ge 颜歌 : The Leeds Centre for New Chinese Writing". writingchinese.leeds.ac.uk.
- ^ a b Leu, Chelsea (2023-07-12). "Elsewhere by Yan Ge review – a visceral English debut". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-10-22.
- ^ Bhanoo, Sindya (2023-09-15). "In Three New Story Collections, Much Is Left Unsaid". New York Times. Retrieved 2023-10-22.
- ^ a b "Yan Ge: A Budding Author - All China Women's Federation". www.womenofchina.cn.[dead link]
- ^ Abrahamsen, Eric. "Zhong Nige". Paper Republic.
- ^ "White Horse - HopeRoad Publishing". www.hoperoadpublishing.com.
- ^ "20. Reflecting Teenagers on a Sichuanese Mirror: Yan Ge and her stories from Pingle Township". November 19, 2016.
- ^ Abrahamsen, Eric (19 November 2016). "Reflecting Teenagers on a Sichuanese Mirror: Yan Ge and her stories from Pingle Township". Paper Republic.
- ^ "The Chilli Bean Paste Clan".
- ^ Abrahamsen, Eric. "Yan Ge". Paper Republic. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
Content Disclaimer
Informasi ini disarikan dari Wikipedia dan disajikan kembali untuk tujuan edukasi. Konten tersedia di bawah lisensi CC BY-SA 3.0. Kami tidak bertanggung jawab atas ketidakakuratan data yang bersumber dari kontribusi publik tersebut.
- The information displayed on this website is sourced in part or in whole from Wikipedia and has been adapted for the purpose of restating it. We strive to provide accurate and relevant information, however:
- There is no guarantee of absolute accuracy. Wikipedia is an open, collaborative project that can be edited by anyone, so information is subject to change.
- It is not intended to constitute professional advice. The content displayed is for informational and educational purposes only. For important decisions (e.g., medical, legal, or financial), please consult a professional.
- Content copyright. Wikipedia is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License (CC BY-SA). This means that content may be reused with appropriate attribution and shared under a similar license.
- Responsible use. Any risk arising from the use of information from this website is entirely the responsibility of the user.