Jia Pingwa

Jia Pingwa
贾平凹
Born Jia Pingwa (贾平娃)
(1952-02-21) 21 February 1952
Dihua Village, Danfeng County, Shangluo Special Administrative Region, Shaanxi, China
Pen name Jia Pingwa
Occupation Writer
Language Chinese
Education Northwest University (1971-5)
Period 1973 – present
Notable works Ruined City,
Qin Opera
Spouse Han Junfang (韩俊芳)
(1979.1.22-1992.11.26)
Guo Mei (郭梅)
(1996.12.12– present)
Children Jia Qianqian (贾浅浅)
Jia Ruo (贾若)

Jia Pingwa (simplified Chinese: 贾平娃; traditional Chinese: 賈平娃; pinyin: Jiǎ Píngwá; born 21 February 1952), better known by his penname Jia Pingwa (simplified Chinese: 贾平凹; traditional Chinese: 賈平凹; pinyin: Jiǎ Píngwā), is one of China's most popular authors of novels, short stories, poetry, and non-fiction.[1] He was born in 1952 in Dihua Village, Danfeng County, Shangluo Special Administrative Region (present-day Shangluo City), Shaanxi, later graduating from Northwest University in Xi'an.[2] His most well-known novels include Ruined City, which was banned by the State Publishing Administration for over 17 years for its explicit sexual content, and Qin Opera, winner of the 2009 Mao Dun Literature Prize.[3][4]

Early life and teen years

Born only three years after the founding of the People's Republic of China, as the son of a school teacher, Jia Yanchun (贾彦春), Jia had an early role model for his later decision to become a writer. Due to a shortage of qualified teachers in Shaanxi at the time, however, Jia's father was often away from home and so he spent much of his early childhood with his mother, Zhou Xiao'e (周小鹅).[5] With the advent of the Cultural Revolution in 1966, Jia Yanchun was accused of being a counter-revolutionary and he spent the next ten years in a labor camp. Three years later, with the closing of all schools in China following the excesses of the Red Guards, Jia was dispatched with his classmates to build reservoirs in the countryside.[6]

Pen name

Jia's given name, Píngwá 平娃, literally means 'ordinary child', a name suggested to Jia's parents by a fortune teller following the death of their first born child.[7] He later chose the pen name Píngwā 平凹, a play on his given name, as the character for 'ordinary' also means 'flat', and in southern Shaanxi dialect the character for 'concave' (and by extension 'uneven') 凹 is pronounced , similar to or 'child' in his given name. Because 'uneven' 凹 is pronounced āo in Standard Chinese, however, his name is often misread as Píng'āo.

Education and early career

While working on the production brigade, Jia had the good fortune to attract the attention of local party cadres after volunteering to write revolutionary slogans, and thanks to their support he was sent to study literature at Northwest University in Xi'an in 1971.[6] Two years later, Jia's first short story, "A Pair of Socks", appeared in The Xi'an Daily, and was soon followed by many others. After graduating in 1975 Jia found employment at Shaanxi People's Publishing House editing the monthly magazine Chang’an, and in 1978 his short story "Full Moon" won a national award from the China Writers Association. These early were collected in Soldier Boy and Morning Songs. Like many stories published during this period (but quite different from his later work), Jia's early stories feature brave young men and women committed to the cause of Chinese socialism.[8]

Turn towards native-place fiction

Inspired perhaps by the worsening health of his father, who had fallen into alcoholism, in 1980 Jia published his first collection of rural fiction set in his home province of Shaanxi, Notes from the Highlands, and in 1982, on the strength of his published short stories and essays, Jia was admitted the Xi'an Literary Federation, allowing him to pursue writing full-time. Although he found himself under greater scrutiny, even becoming a target of criticism during the Anti-Spiritual Pollution Campaign of late 1983, Jia's sketches of everyday life in Shangzhou (the traditional name for his native region) were published to greater and greater success, with the novellas First Records of Shangzhou, Further Records of Shangzhou and More Records of Shangzhou appearing between 1983 and 1986.[9]

In 1986, Jia published his first novel, Shangzhou, an account of a young fugitive who the police who suspect of having committed a robbery in the city. He decides to hide out in his rural hometown, giving Jia a narrative framework around which to structure his popular descriptions of life in the countryside. This novel was quickly followed by two more: Turbulence in 1987 and Pregnancy in 1988. This flurry of activity was interrupted by the death of Jia's father in 1989. Grief would compel Jia to take a more introspective tone with his next project, conceived as a semi-autobiographical account of a morally depraved author from the countryside who has been corrupted by fame. In the 1993 novel Ruined City, frank depictions of various sexual acts (drawing comparisons to the Ming dynasty vernacular classic the Jin Ping Mei) earned the book both a wide audience and a 17-year ban from the authorities, causing it to become one of the most pirated books in modern Chinese literature.[10]

After Ruined City and present day

Despite the ban, Jia continued to write, publishing a trilogy of rural novels: White Nights (1995), Earth Gate (1996), and Old Gao Village (1998). This was followed by the modern fable Wolves of Yesterday (2000), about a Wu Song-like hunter chasing a modern-day environmentalist who turns into a wolf, a historical romance and counter-history Heath Report (2002), and Qin Opera (2005), a challenging work incorporating elements of local Shaanxi operas which earned him the 2008 Mao Dun Literature Award. Over the last decade, Jia has completed five additional novels: Happy (2007), Old Kiln (2011), The Lantern Bearer (2013), Lao Sheng (2014), and Jihua (2016).

In 1992 Jia was admitted to the prestigious Chinese Writers Association, later being elected Chairman of Shaanxi branch of the organization and in 2003 he was appointed dean of the School of Humanities and the Dean of the College of Arts at Xi'an University of Architecture and Technology.[11][12] Additionally, he is a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference[13] and Xi'an People's Congress, a member of the Presidium of the Chinese Writers' Association, the Xi'an Literary Federation President, an honorary chairman of the Xi'an Writers' Association, the editor-in-chief of the literary journal Essay 《美文》, and writer-in-residence at the Ocean University of China.[14][15][16][17]

Style

Jia Pingwa is known for mixing traditional vernacular story-telling with modern realism in his work, which Carlos Rojas describes as being "explicitly rooted in the breathless modernization of contemporary urban China, while at the same time... [featuring] a nostalgic fascination with the historical tradition which that same modernization process simultaneously threatens to erase."[18]

List of works

Novels:[19]

Short story collections:

Essay collections:

Poetry:

Awards and honours

References

  1. "Kung fu hustle made Louis Cha top of writer ranking". China Daily. 2006-08-31. Retrieved 2008-10-27.
  2. "西北大学110周年校庆公告(第一号)". nwu.edu.cn. 15 November 2011. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  3. "《废都》解禁". 163.com. 29 July 2009. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  4. 1 2 "第七届茅盾文学奖获奖篇目(2003—2006)". chinawriter.com.cn. 5 November 2008. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  5. Wang, Yiyan (2006). Narrating China: Jia Pingwa and His Fictional World. Routledge. pp. 26–27. ISBN 0-415-32675-3.
  6. 1 2 Wang, Yiyan (2006). Narrating China: Jia Pingwa and His Fictional World. Routledge. p. 29. ISBN 0-415-32675-3.
  7. Wang, Yiyan (2006). Narrating China: Jia Pingwa and His Fictional World. Routledge. pp. 27–28. ISBN 0-415-32675-3.
  8. Wang, Yiyan (2006). Narrating China: Jia Pingwa and His Fictional World. Routledge. p. 35. ISBN 0-415-32675-3.
  9. Wang, Yiyan (2006). Narrating China: Jia Pingwa and His Fictional World. Routledge. pp. 37–38. ISBN 0-415-32675-3.
  10. Martinsen, Joel (4 August 2009). "Jia Pingwa's banned novel returns after 17 years". Danwei.org. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  11. "陕西省作家协会简介". shaanxiwriters.org. Archived from the original on 30 October 2012. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  12. "西安建筑科技大学文学院". xauat.edu.cn. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  13. "贾平凹". cppcc.gov.cn. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  14. "中国作家协会第八届全国委员会主席、副主席、主席团委员名单". chinawriter.com.cn. 25 November 2011. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  15. "吴克敬新任西安市作协主席 贾平凹担任名誉主席". chinanews.com. 16 April 2010. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  16. "美文简介". Mei Wen. Archived from the original on 19 November 2012. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  17. "贾平凹受聘中国海洋大学驻校作家". ouc.edu.cn. 25 June 2010. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  18. Rojas, Carlos (Winter 2006). "Flies' Eyes, Mural Remnants, and Jia Pingwa's Perverse Nostalgia". positions: east asia cultures critique. Duke University Press. 14 (3). Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  19. For outline summaries of the novels, see Nick Stember's post "Jia Pingwa as Global Literature" https://glli-us.org/2017/02/20/jia-pingwa-as-global-literature-by-nick-stember/
  20. Fictional Authors, Imaginary Audiences: Modern Chinese Literature ... 2003 p260 "Jia Pingwa (male, b. 1952) established his reputation as a nativist writer in the 1980s. His novel Fuzao (Beijing: Zuojia chubanshe, 1988; translated as Turbulence, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1991), which won the 1988 Pegasus Prize"
  21. Orthofer, M.A. (20 March 2016). "The Complete Review: Ruined City - Jia Pingwa". Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  22. Flood, Alison (9 December 2015). "How Amazon came to dominate fiction in translation". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  23. Morse, Canaan (14 April 2011). "Old Kiln (古炉)". Paper Republic. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  24. Rojas, Carlos. "Carlos Rojas - CV" (PDF). Retrieved 4 June 2016.
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  27. "Turbulence (Pegasus Prize for Literature)". Grove Press. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  28. "第四届获奖名单(1991年度)". chinawriter.com.cn. 21 August 1991. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  29. Guang, Yang. "In black and white". chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  30. "Chinese Author Awarded French Medal". china.org.cn. 7 July 2003. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
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  32. "第一届「红楼梦奖」首奖作品". redchamber.hkbu.edu.hk. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
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  35. "陈忠实贾平凹获"突出成就奖"". sina.com.cn. 25 June 2006. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  36. "首届蒲松龄短篇小说奖". people.com.cn. 21 September 2007. Retrieved 19 October 2012.

Further reading

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