Han Shaogong
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Han Shaogong (Traditional:韓少功; Simplified: 韩少功; Pinyin: Hán Shàogōng; born January 1, 1953) is a prominent and innovative Chinese writer.
Han was born in Hunan, China. While relying on traditional Chinese culture, in particular Chinese mythology, folklore, Taoism and Buddhism as source of inspiration, he also borrows freely from Western literary techniques. He was once an enthusiastic Red Guard. Employed at a local cultural center after 1977, he soon won recognition as an outspoken new literary talent. His early stories attacked the ultra-leftist degradation of China during the Mao era; they tended toward a slightly modernist style. However, he reemerged in the mid-1980s as the leader of an avant-garde school, the "Search for Roots" or the Xungen Movement.
Han's work is influenced by Kafka and by the magic realism of Gabriel García Márquez. In 1987, he published a Chinese translation of Milan Kundera's The Unbearable Lightness of Being.
He edited Hainan Jishi Wenxue ("Hainan Documentary Literature"), a successful literary magazine. He and other Chinese writers visited France in 1988, at the invitation of the French Ministry of Culture; Han was invited back in 1989 but was denied permission to leave China until 1991.
His major works include A Dictionary of Maqiao, a novel published in 1996.
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