Zhang Xinxin

For the footballer, see Zhang Xinxin (footballer).
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Zhang.

Zhang Xinxin (simplified Chinese: 张辛欣; traditional Chinese: 張辛欣; pinyin: Zhāng Xīnxīn), (Nanjing, 1953) is a female Chinese writer. She is best known in the west for her book, co-authored with Sang Ye (桑晔), of 100 interviews with ordinary citizens, published as Chinese Profiles (Beijing 1986),[1] and revised as Chinese Lives (1988).[2][3] Zhang Xinxin grew up in Beijing. In the early 1980s she trained in theatre directing at the Central Drama Academy, Beijing. The fiction she published in the 1980s earned her both acclaim and criticism. Since then she has written several novels, short stories and poems, and works of non-fiction (essays, commentaries, news reports and scenarios), as well as film, TV and radio work (directing, presenting and scriptwriting). Her key works include:

Fiction

Novels

French edition: Actes Sud; Arles, 1987
German edition: Yashima; Bonn, 1986
Japanese edition: Tokumang Company; Tokyo, 1987

Novellas

French edition: Actes Sud; Arles, 1988, 2004
Japanese edition (in the volume titled On The Same Horizon): Tokumang Company, Tokyo, 1987
English edition: "Mad about Orchids" 疯狂的君子兰(中英双语)bilingual online, 2014[4][5]
English edition: Cornell Eastern Program; Ithaca, 1986
German edition: Yashima; Bonn, 1986
French edition (Le Courrier des Bandits): Actes Sud; Arles, 1989

Short stories

English edition: "Dragonworld" in The Guardian, 14 April 2012.[6] and Read Paper Republic, Afterlives 2, 3 Nov 2016.[7]

Graphic novel

Non-Fiction

English editions (Chinese Lives): Pantheon Books; New York, 1987 // MacMillan; London, 1987 // Irwin; Ontario, 1987 // Penguin Books; London, 1989 // (Chinese Profiles) Panda Books; Beijing, 1987
French editions (L'homme de Pekin): Actes Sud; Arles, 1992; Panda Books; Beijing, 1987
German edition (Peking Menschen): Diederichs; Koln, 1986
Japanese edition (The Conditions of Chinese Women and Money Doesn't Fall from Heaven): Heibonsha; Tokyo, 1986
Swedish edition (Leva I Kina): Forum; 1988
Dutch edition (Mensen in China): Wereldvenster, 1987
Norwegian edition (Arvingene hverdag etter Mao): Aschehoug, 1988
Danish edition: (Tiden), 1989
Spanish edition: Editorial Ausa, 1989
Russian edition:
French edition (Au Long Du Grand Canal): Actes Sud; Arles, 1992

Film, TV, radio

Further reading

External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Zhang Xinxin

References

  1. Modern Chinese Women Writers: Critical Appraisals - Page 215 Michael S. Duke - 1989 "This quotation and other observations about Zhang Xinxin's life and thought are based on personal discussions with the ... 16 Sang Ye, "About Chinese Profiles," Chinese Profiles: 371. l At least one Chinese critic has remarked on the fruitful "
  2. Chinese lives: an oral history of contemporary China Xinxin Zhang, Ye Sang, William John Francis Jenner - 1988
  3. Mao's Children in New China: Voices from the Red Guard Generation - Page xxvi Yarong Jiang, David W. Ashley - 2000 "Sang Ye and Zhang Xinxin, eds, Chinese Profiles (San Francisco: China Books and Periodicals, 1987), which contains interviews with 100 ordinary Chinese citizens, some of whom are from the Red Guard generation. One of the earliest works of this type was B. Michael Frolic, Mao's People: Sixteen Portraits of Life in Revolutionary China 1981"
  4. https://read.douban.com/ebook/3263374/
  5. https://www.academia.edu/5983073/Zhang_Xinxin_Mad_about_Orchids_translation_of_short_story_
  6. http://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/apr/14/dragonworld-zhang-xinxin-story-china
  7. Read Paper Republic, 3 Nov 2016.https://paper-republic.org/pubs/read/dragonworld/
  8. https://chinesebooksforyoungreaders.wordpress.com/2016/11/03/zhang-xinxin-and-little-peoples-books/
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