Xue Xinran

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Xue.
Xuē Xīnrán
薛欣然

Born 1958
Beijing
Occupation journalist
writer
radio presenter
speaker
advocate
Education First Military University of People's Liberation Army
Spouse Toby Eady
Xue Xinran
Traditional Chinese 薛欣然
Simplified Chinese 薛欣然

Xuē Xīnrán (薛欣然, pen name Xinran, born in Beijing in 1958) is a British-Chinese journalist, author, speaker, and advocate for women's issues.[1] She was a popular radio personality in China with a call-in program named "Words on the Night Breeze" from 1989 to 1997.[2] The program focused on women's issues and life stories. She was well known for travelling extensively in China to interview women for her work. In 1997, she moved to London and began writing stories of the women she met along her journeys. Her first book, The Good Women of China, was published in 2002, becoming an international bestseller.[2] She frequently contributes to The Guardian and the BBC.[3]

Education

First Military University of People's Liberation Army, 1983-1987;[4] English and International Relations[1]

Personal life

Xinran was born into a wealthy and privileged family on July 19, 1958. She was raised by her grandparents due to her parents' imprisonment during China's cultural revolution. She has said that her first memory was of the Red Guards setting her home on fire when she was 6 years old.[4] Xinran has one son, Panpan, who was born in 1988. She moved to London in 1997 and married British literary agent Toby Eady in 2002.[4]

Books

In London, she began work on her seminal book about Chinese women's lives The Good Women of China, a memoir relating many of the stories she heard while hosting her radio show ("Words on the Night Breeze") in China. The book is a candid revelation of many Chinese women's thoughts and experiences that took place both during and after the Cultural Revolution when Chairman Mao and Communism ruled the land. The book was published in 2002 and has been translated into over thirty languages.

Sky Burial, her second book, was published in 2004. This is the story of Shu Wen, whose husband, only a few months after their marriage in the 1950s, joined the Chinese army and was sent to Tibet for the purpose of unification of the two cultures.

A collection of Xinran’s Guardian columns from 2003 to 2005, What the Chinese Don't Eat, was published in 2006. It covers a vast range of topics from food to sex education, and from the experiences of British mothers who have adopted Chinese daughters, to whether Chinese people do Christmas shopping or have swimming pools.

Xinran‘s first novel Miss Chopsticks was published in July 2007. It explores the uneasy relationship between Chinese "migrant workers" and the cities they flock to. China's economic reform is changing the role of its chopstick girls. Once a disposable burden, they can now take city jobs as waitresses, masseuses, factory line workers and cleaners, They bring bundles of cash home, earning them unprecedented respect in patriarchal villages, as well as winning the respect and hearts of city dwellers.

Xinran’s fifth book, China Witness: Voices from a Silent Generation was published in the UK in October 2008. It is based on twenty years worth of interviews conducted by Xinran with the last two generations in China. She hopes it will, ‘restore a real modern history of China, from real people after most historical evidence was destroyed in the Culture Revolution’ . She followed this in February 2010, with the publication of Message from an Unknown Chinese Mother, a collection of heartbreaking stories from Chinese mothers who have lost or had to abandon children. In 2015 she published Buy Me the Sky, which contains stories of the children brought up under China's One-child policy and the effect that has had on their lives, families and ability to deal with life's challenges.[5]

Other

In August 2004 Xinran set up ‘The Mothers’ Bridge of Love’ (MBL).[6] MBL reaches out to Chinese children in all corners of the world; by creating a bridge of understanding between China and the West and between adoptive culture and birth culture, MBL ultimately wants to help bridge the huge poverty gap which still exists in many parts of China. The MBL book for adoptive families, Mother's Bridge of Love, came third in TIME magazine’s list of the top ten children’s books of 2007.

Xinran often advises western media (including BBC and Sky) about western relations with China, and makes frequent television and radio appearances. She is a member of the Advisory Board of the Asia House Festival of Asian Literature.

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 Hong, Terry (2003). "Xinran: The Voice of the Good Women of China" (PDF). The Bloomsbury Review 23 (6). Retrieved 4 September 2014.
  2. 1 2 "Xue Xinran Biography". Bookbrowse.com. Retrieved 4 September 2014.
  3. Guest, Katy (13 July 2007). "Xinran: I want to tell the world about the lives of ordinary Chinese women". The Independent (The Independent). Retrieved 4 September 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 Lambert, Angela (13 July 2002). "The good woman of Henan (Book Review)". theguardian.com. The Guardian. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  5. Xue, Xinran (23 May 2015). "China’s little emperors – the children without siblings". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  6. "The Mothers' Bridge of Love web page". The Mothers' Bridge of Love Charity. 2015. Retrieved 4 September 2015.

External links

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