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March 8, 2014 |
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Eileen Chang (Simplified Chinese: 张爱玲; Traditional Chinese: 張愛玲; Pinyin: Zhāng ?il?ng) (September 30, 1920 - found dead September 8, 1995) was a China|Chinese writer. She had also used the pseudonym Liang Jing (梁京), which is almost unknown. Her works frequently deal with the tensions between men and women in love. Born in Shanghai on September 30, 1920, of a renowned family, Chang's paternal grandfather Zhang Peilun was a son-in-law to Li Hongzhang, an influential Qing court official. She was named Zhang Ying (张瑛) at birth. Her family moved to Tianjin in 1922, where she started school at the age of four. When Chang was five, her birth mother left for Britain after her father took in a concubine and grew addicted to opium. Although she did return four years later, following his promise to quit the drug and split with the concubine, a divorce could not be averted. Chang's unhappy childhood in the broken family probably gave her later works their pessimistic overtone. Image:Eileen_Chang_Child.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Childhood photo of Chang taken in the French Park in Tianjin The family moved back to Shanghai in 1928. Two years later, Chang was renamed Eileen (her Chinese first name, Ailing, was actually a transliteration of Eileen) in preparation for her entry into the Saint Maria Girls' School. During her secondary education, Chang was already deemed a genius in literature. Her writings were published in the school magazine. In 1939, she was accepted into the University of Hong Kong to study Literature. She also received a scholarship to study in the University of London, though the opportunity had to be given up when Hong Kong fell to the Japanese in 1941. Chang then returned to Shanghai. She fed herself with what she was best at - writing. It was during this period when some of her most acclaimed works, including Qing Cheng Zhi Lian and Jin Suo Ji, were penned. Chang met her first husband Hu Lancheng in 1943 and married him in the following year. She loved him dearly, despite he being already married as well as labelled a traitor to the Japanese. When Japan was defeated in 1945, Hu escaped to Wenzhou, where he fell in love with yet another woman. When Chang traced him to his refuge, she realized she could not salvage the marriage. They finally divorced in 1947. In 1952, Chang migrated to Hong Kong, where she worked as a translator for the American News Agency for three years. She left for the United States in the fall of 1955, never to return to Mainland China again. In New York, Chang met her second husband, script writer Lai Ya, whom she married in August 1956. Lai was paralyzed after he was hit by strokes in 1961 and eventually died in 1967. After Lai's death, Chang held short-term jobs at Radcliffe College and UC Berkeley. Image:Eileen_Chang_1968.jpg|right|thumb|180px|Taken in Boston in 1968, this is probably the last private photograph Chang had taken that was released to the public. Chang relocated to Los Angeles in 1973. Two years later, she completed the English translation of Hai Shang Hua, a celebrated Qing Dynasty|Qing novel. Chang was found dead in her apartment on September 8, 1995, by her Iranian landlord. According to her will, she was cremated without any open funeral and her ashes were released to the Pacific Ocean. Chang's main works include:
Category:1920 births|Chang, Eileen Category:1995 deaths|Chang, Eileen Category:Chinese American writers|Chang, Eileen Category:Chinese Americans|Chang, Eileen Category:Chinese writers|Chang, Eile de:Zhang Ailing zh-cn:张爱玲 This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Eileen Chang".
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