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Wang Anyi

    March 6, 1954

    Wang Anyi is celebrated for her realist style, focusing on the textures of everyday urban life. Her narratives unflinchingly depict the brutalizing density, the rude jostling, and the endless, often futile, waiting that characterize existence in China's sprawling metropolises. She frequently sets her stories in Shanghai, rendering the city's atmosphere and its inhabitants with vivid detail. Her prose style invites comparisons to Eileen Chang, another prominent Shanghai-based writer.

    Le plus clair de la lune
    Development and integration
    I Love Bill and Other Stories
    Love in a Small Town
    The Song of Everlasting Sorrow
    Fu Ping
    • 2023

      "In two novellas and three short stories, Wang Anyi describes various aspects of life in modern China, centered mainly around Shanghai, Xuzhou, and northern Jiangsu province"--

      I Love Bill and Other Stories
    • 2019

      Fu Ping

      • 296 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Fu Ping is a keenly observed portrait of the lives of lower-class women in Shanghai in the early years of the People's Republic of China. Wang Anyi, one of contemporary China's most acclaimed authors, explores the daily lives of migrants from rural areas and other people on the margins of urban life.

      Fu Ping
    • 2015

      The engineering profession has made a significant and distinguished contribution to Chinese society over the past century. It is a contribution, however, which has received little attention from historians apart from the lives of a handful of the most notable engineers. This paper intends to remedy the deficiency by providing an overview of engineers' origins and development in China from 1949 to 1989. In this paper, the author attempts to analyze the developmental history of Chinese engineers by combining technology, culture and society to explore the factors affecting the development of engineers in socialist China. By reviewing the literature and empirically investigating biographical and bibliometric data, this dissertation not only demonstrates the development of the Chinese engineering profession, but also reveals characteristics of engineers' education, career patterns and social status from 1949-1989.

      Development and integration
    • 2008

      The Song of Everlasting Sorrow

      • 456 pages
      • 16 hours of reading
      3.9(414)Add rating

      The Song of Everlasting Sorrow follows the adventures of Wang Qiyao, a girl born of the crowded, labyrinthine alleys of Shanghai's working-class neighborhoods. Infatuated with the glitz and glamour of 1940s Hollywood, Wang Qiyao seeks fame in the Miss Shanghai beauty pageant, and this fleeting moment of stardom becomes the pinnacle of her life. After the Communist victory, Wang Qiyao continues to indulge in the decadent pleasures of the Shanghai bourgeoisie, secretly playing mahjong during the antirightist campaign and exchanging lovers on the eve of the Cultural Revolution. She reemerges in the 1980s as a purveyor of "old Shanghai," only to become embroiled in a tragedy that echoes the Hollywood noirs of her youth.

      The Song of Everlasting Sorrow
    • 1988

      A true story based on Wang's experiences in the countryside during the Cultural Revolution, Love in a Small Town is also the author's personal exploration into human nature and sexuality. Written at a time when sex was still a taboo subject in China, the book's real innovation is not its sexual explicitness, but its acknowledgement of sexual love as a powerful force in a human life.

      Love in a Small Town