Introduction to female poet Shu Ting

Shu Ting emerged in the Chinese poetry scene in the late 1970s. She and her contemporaries Bei Dao, Gu Cheng, Liang Xiaobin, etc. set off a wave of "hazy poetry" in the Chinese poetry circle with a poetic style that was very different from their predecessors. The following is an introduction to the poetess Shu Ting that I compiled for everyone. Welcome to refer to it~

Experience introduction:

Born in 1952 in Shima Town, Fujian;

1969 Go to the countryside to join the queue;

Returned to the city to work as a worker in 1972;

Started publishing poetry in 1979;

In 1980, he worked at the Fujian Federation of Literary and Art Circles and engaged in professional writing .

Personal introduction:

Shu Ting, formerly known as Gong Peiyu, was born in Shima Town, Xiamen, Fujian Province in 1952. She is one of the representative writers of the Misty Poetry School. "To the Oak" is a misty poem One of Chao's masterpieces, as famous as Beidao and Gucheng. In 1969, he went to the countryside to join the army, and in 1972, he returned to the city to work as a worker. He began publishing poetry in 1979. In 1980, he worked at the Fujian Federation of Literary and Art Circles and engaged in professional writing. He is the author of poetry collections "Brig", "Singing Iris", "Archaeopteryx", prose collections "Heart Smoke", "Autumn Mood", "Hard Bones in the Sky", "Poetic Thoughts in Dewdrops", "Collected Works of Shu Ting" (3 volumes), etc. The poem "Motherland, My Dear Motherland" won the National Outstanding Poetry Award for Young and Middle-aged People in 1980, and "Brig" won the first National Outstanding Poetry Collection Award for New Poetry and the 1993 Zhuang Chongwen Literary Award.

Shu Ting is good at introspecting the rhythm of her own emotions, and she especially shows the unique sensitivity of women in capturing complex and delicate emotional experiences. The complexity and richness of emotions are often expressed in twists and turns through special sentence patterns such as assumptions and concessions. Shu Ting can also discover sharp and profound poetic philosophy in some conventional phenomena that are often ignored by people ("Goddess Peak", "Hui'an Women"), and writes this discovery in a way that is both speculative and touching.

Shu Ting’s poems have bright and beautiful images, and rigorous and smooth thinking logic. From this aspect, her poems are not “hazy”. It's just that most poems use metaphors, partial or overall symbols, and rarely express confessions directly, so the images expressed have a certain degree of ambiguity.

Achievements:

The poem "Motherland, My Dear Motherland" won the 1980 National Youth Outstanding Poetry Award;

"Brig" won the The first National Outstanding New Poetry Collection Award and the 1993 Zhuang Chongwen Literature Award;

"True Water Has No Fragrance" won the "Essayist of the Year Award" at the 6th Chinese Literature Media Ceremony;

"In Under the Star - An Incident in Middle School" was selected as a Chinese language textbook for sixth graders by the Shanghai Education Press;

In 2008, it won the "China's Top Ten Top Ten 2008" sponsored by "Selected Poems" magazine Poet" honor.

Winner of the 2012 Cross-Strait Poetry Society Laureate Award.