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Shu Ting
(Wade-Giles name: Shu T'ing) |
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SHU TING (1952 )
Shu Ting is the pen name of Gong Peiyu.
Associated with the Misty school, she was the
leading woman poet in China in the 1980s. A
southeast Fujian native, she was sent to the
countryside during the Cultural Revolution
before she graduated from junior high school.
Then she worked in a cement factory and later a
textile mill and a lightbulb factory and began
to write poetry. In 1979 she published her first
poem and in 1983 was asked to be a professional
writer by the Writers' Association, Fujian
Branch, of which she now is the deputy
chairperson. Her collections of poetry include
Brigantines (1982) and Selected Lyrics of Shu
Ting and Gu Cheng (1985). She won the National
Poetry Award in 1981 and 1983, but she was also
attacked in the early 1980s (during the
Anti-Spiritual Pollution Campaign, along with
many of the other Misty Poets). Her work is
deeply romantic in nature, and must be
understood as a reaction to the repression of
romance in literature, film, song and theater
during the decade long Great Proletarian
Cultural Revolution (1966 1976). Her tender,
romantic poems sometimes don't play as well in
English translation as they do in Chinese, since
modern and postmodern sensibilities have
outmoded such sentiment, but her poems have a
crystalline, lyrical strength that often saves
her from her own saccharine tendencies and that
has made her the best known contemporary Chinese
woman poet in the West. She has also published
several books of prose.
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