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18 Facts About Wang Xiaobo

1.

Wang Xiaobo was a renowned contemporary Chinese novelist and essayist from Beijing.

2.

Wang Xiaobo was transferred to a collective farm in Yunnan during the Cultural Revolution, which later became the writing background for his most famous novel Golden Age.

3.

Wang Xiaobo is one of the most influential and popular novelists in China.

4.

Wang Xiaobo has become a cultural icon of the country.

5.

On May 13,1952, Wang Xiaobo was born in a family of intellectuals in Beijing.

6.

Wang Xiaobo began to write novels based on the legend of the Tang dynasty, during which he received the guidance of historian Xu Zhuoyun.

7.

Wang Xiaobo returned to China in 1988, and served as a lecturer in the Department of Sociology of Peking University.

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Chen Yinke
8.

Wang Xiaobo passed away in Beijing on April 11,1997, after a heart attack.

9.

Wang Xiaobo published essays, which served as the primary entry point to his work.

10.

Wang Xiaobo's novels were drawn from his life experiences, including his time as an "educated youth" in Yunnan and as an engineer engaged in technical work.

11.

Wang Xiaobo admired and advocated science and rationality, and believed that people's lives should pursue the unknown.

12.

Wang Xiaobo opposed the imprisonment of thoughts and advocated that people's thinking should be diverse, to make life interesting, and that they should love wisdom.

13.

Wang Xiaobo's work was particularly influential with college students in the 1990s, but his influence is still felt.

14.

Wang Xiaobo won the United Daily News novella award two times before his death and was widely praised in overseas Chinese literature circles.

15.

Wang Xiaobo's works have been disseminated and accepted unprecedentedly, and have prompted serious reactions in both folk and intellectual circles.

16.

Critics have compared Wang Xiaobo's sudden rise in popularity to that of Chen Yinke, signifying the second boom of the liberal wave in China.

17.

Wang Xiaobo has been identified as an inspiration for and early representative of minjian, grassroot intellectuals, a population of alternative intellectuals who were able to grow around the 2000s in China.

18.

Wang Xiaobo wrote several novels, short story collections and essays, some of which have been translated into English, French and Italian.