Feng Zhongpu(born 26 July 1928), better known by herpen nameZong Pu,is a Chinese novelist.[1]She won theMao Dun Literature Prizefor her 2001 novel,Eastern Concealment.[2]
Zong Pu | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Native name | Tông phác | ||||||
Born | Feng Zhongpu (Phùng chung phác) July 26, 1928 Beijing, China | ||||||
Occupation | Novelist | ||||||
Language | Chinese | ||||||
Alma mater | Nankai University Tsinghua University | ||||||
Period | 1948–present | ||||||
Genre | Novel,prose | ||||||
Notable works | Eastern Concealment | ||||||
Notable awards | 6thMao Dun Literature Prize 2001Eastern Concealment | ||||||
Parents | Feng Youlan(father) | ||||||
Chinese name | |||||||
Chinese | TôngPhác | ||||||
|
Born inBeijing,Zong is the daughter ofFeng Youlan,a prominent philosopher, and she grew up on various university campuses.[3]Zong graduated fromTsinghua Universityin 1951. She became a member of theChina Writers Associationin 1962.
Works
edit- Hong dou(Red Beans), 1957
- Xian shang de meng(Dream on the Strings), 1978
- 'Sanheng shi' (Everlasting Rock), 1980. Translated by Aimee Lykes asThe Everlasting Rock,1998.ISBN978-0894107825.
- 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)
editReferences
edit- ^Zong PuArchivedJanuary 16, 2014, at theWayback 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.ISBN978-0-8108-5516-8.Retrieved16 October2012.
- ^Zong, Pu (2018).Departure for the South.London: ACA Publishing Limited.ISBN978-1-910760-34-5.OCLC1036286009.
- ^Zong, Pu (2019).Eastern Concealment.London: ACA Publishing.ISBN978-1-910760-35-2.
- Seven Contemporary Chinese Women Writersby Irene Wettenhall The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, No. 10 (Jul., 1983), pp. 175–178]
- Research Note: Women Writersby Gladys Yang inChina Quarterly,No. 103 (Sep., 1985), pp. 510–517.
- The river fans out: Chinese fiction since the late 1970sby Henry Y. H. Zhao,European Review(2003), 11: 193-208 Cambridge University Press.