Shu Ting
Original name: Gong.
Ancestral home: Quanzhou, Fujian
1952 was born in shima town, Fujian (Longhai, Zhangzhou).
Shu Ting, a contemporary poet. As one of the representative writers of the misty poetry school, To Oak is one of the representative works of the misty poetry tide, which is as famous as Beidao and Gu Cheng, but in fact, her poems are closer to the traditional poets of the previous generation, and her resistance is much less. 1969 went to the countryside to jump the queue, 1972 went back to the city as a worker. 1979 began to publish poetry. 65438-0980 worked in Fujian Federation of Literary and Art Circles, engaged in professional writing. He is the author of a collection of poems, Bimasted Boat, Singing Iris, Archaeopteryx, a collection of essays, Heart Smoke, Autumn Mood, Poems in Dew, Collected Works of Shu Ting (3 volumes) and True Water Without Fragrance. The poem "Motherland, My Dear Motherland" won the 1980 National Excellent Poetry Award for Young and Middle-aged People, and was selected into the third volume of the ninth grade of compulsory Chinese for Senior One in Jiangsu Education Publishing House, and "Double Mast Boat" won the first National Excellent Poetry Collection Award, 1993 Zhuang Chongwen Literature Award. True Water Without Fragrance won the "Prose Award of the Year" in the 6th China Literature and Media Festival. In addition, the Chinese textbook for the sixth grade of Shanghai Education Publishing House is excerpted from Under that Star-An Event in Middle School, which writes people's voices in childhood very accurately.
Shu Ting is good at introspecting the rhythm of self-emotion, especially showing the unique sensitivity of women in grasping complex and meticulous emotional experience. The complexity and richness of emotions are often manifested through special sentence twists and turns such as assumptions and concessions. Shu Ting can also find sharp and profound poetic philosophy (goddess peak and Hui 'an daughter) in some conventional phenomena that are often ignored by people, and write this discovery with both speculative power and touching feelings.
Shu Ting's poems have bright images and meticulous and smooth thinking logic. In this respect, her poems are not "hazy". Poetry, on the other hand, mostly uses metaphors, partial or whole symbols, and rarely expresses itself, so the images expressed are vague.