Neha Patil (Editor)

Yuan Jing (writer)

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Occupation
  
novelist, screenwriter

Period
  
1940s–1980s

Language
  
Chinese

Books
  
Daughters and Sons

Born
  
Yuan Xingzhuang (袁行莊) 1914 Beijing, China (
1914
)

Notable work
  
Daughters and Sons (1949, co-authored with Kong Jue)

Spouse
  
Kong Jue (孔厥) Lou Ningxian (娄凝先)

Relatives
  
Yuan Xiaoyuan, sister Yuan Xingpei, cousin Chiung Yao, cousin-niece

Died
  
29 July 1999, Tianjin, China

Yuan Jing (1914 – 29 July 1999), born Yuan Xingzhuang, was a Chinese fiction writer, best known for her wartime novel Daughters and Sons (1949, co-authored with her then-husband Kong Jue), which was adapted into a successful 1951 film.

Yuan Jing came from a famous intellectual family. Her sister Yuan Xiaoyuan was China's first female diplomat. Scholar Yuan Xingpei is her cousin. Taiwan-based novelist Chiung Yao is a cousin-niece.

Yuan Jing joined the Communist Party of China in 1935 and went to Yan'an during the Second Sino-Japanese War where she began to write in several genres. During the Korean War she went to Korea as a journalist. Attacked during the Cultural Revolution, she resumed her writing in the 1980s, focusing on children's literature.

References

Yuan Jing (writer) Wikipedia


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