Zong Pu
Zong Pu | |||
---|---|---|---|
Native name | 宗璞 | ||
Born | Feng Zhongpu (冯钟璞) July 26, 1928 Beijing, China | ||
Occupation | Novelist | ||
Language | Chinese | ||
Alma mater | Nankai University Tsinghua University | ||
Period | 1948–present | ||
Genre | Novel, prose | ||
Notable works | Note of Hiding in the East | ||
Notable awards | 6th Mao Dun Literature Prize 2001 Note of Hiding in the East | ||
Parents | Feng Youlan (father) | ||
Chinese name | |||
Chinese | 宗璞 | ||
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Feng Zhongpu (born 26 July 1928), better known by her pen name Zong Pu, is a Chinese novelist.[1] She won the Mao Dun Literature Prize for her 2001 novel, Note of Hiding in the East.[2]
Born in Beijing, Zong is the daughter of Feng Youlan, a prominent philosopher, and she grew up on various university campuses.[3] Zong graduated from Tsinghua University in 1951. She became a member of the China Writers Association in 1962.
Works[]
- Hong dou (Red Beans), 1957
- Xian shang de meng (Dream on the Strings), 1978
- 'Sanheng shi' (Everlasting Rock), 1980. Translated by Aimee Lykes as The Everlasting Rock, 1998. ISBN 978-0894107825.
- shu shui (Who am I), 1979
- (A Head in the Marshes), 1985
- Nan du ji (Heading South), 1988
- Dong cang ji (Hiding in the East), 2001
Translated works (English)[]
References[]
- ^ Zong Pu Archived January 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, retrieved October 16, 2012
- ^ Laureate Writers Awarded, China.org.cn, July 27, 2005, retrieved April 29, 2011.
- ^ Li-Hua Ying (2010). Historical Dictionary of Modern Chinese Literature. Scarecrow Press. pp. 292–3. ISBN 978-0-8108-5516-8. Retrieved 16 October 2012.
- ^ Zong, Pu (2018). Departure for the South. London: ACA Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1-910760-34-5. OCLC 1036286009.
- ^ Zong, Pu (2019). Eastern Concealment. London: ACA Publishing. ISBN 978-1-910760-35-2.
- Seven Contemporary Chinese Women Writers by Irene Wettenhall The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, No. 10 (Jul., 1983), pp. 175–178]
- Research Note: Women Writers by Gladys Yang in China Quarterly, No. 103 (Sep., 1985), pp. 510–517.
- The river fans out: Chinese fiction since the late 1970s by Henry Y. H. Zhao, European Review (2003), 11: 193-208 Cambridge University Press.
Categories:
- 1928 births
- Living people
- 20th-century Chinese short story writers
- 20th-century Chinese women writers
- 21st-century Chinese short story writers
- 21st-century Chinese women writers
- Chinese children's writers
- Chinese women children's writers
- Chinese scholars
- Chinese women novelists
- Chinese women short story writers
- Mao Dun Literature Prize laureates
- People's Republic of China short story writers
- Short story writers from Beijing