Liu Heng | |||||||
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Native name | 刘恒 | ||||||
Born | May 1954 (age 70) Beijing | ||||||
Resting place | Beijing | ||||||
Occupation | Novelist, screenwriter | ||||||
Language | Chinese | ||||||
Nationality | Chinese | ||||||
Alma mater | Beijing Normal University | ||||||
Period | 1977 - present | ||||||
Genre | Novel, drama | ||||||
Literary movement | Literary Realism | ||||||
Notable works | Fu Xi, Fu Xi Black Snow | ||||||
Chinese name | |||||||
Simplified Chinese | 刘恒 | ||||||
Traditional Chinese | 劉恆 | ||||||
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Liu Heng (Chinese: 刘恒; pinyin: Liú Héng; born in May, 1954) is a Chinese writer.[1] He is generally seen as a realist writer.[2] He became a professional writer in the 1970s after having worked as a peasant farmer, a factory worker and a soldier, classes which have served as fodder for his stories and, not coincidentally, classes which Mao Zedong promoted as the audience for literature in his 1942 Talks At The Yenan Forum On Literature And Art. "Dogshit Food" won the 1985-86 best short story award. "Fuxi Fuxi" won him the national Prize for Best Novelettes in 1987, and was the basis for the film Ju Dou. His novel "Hēi de xuě" (Black Snow; 黑的雪), about the problems faced by a young juvenile delinquent upon his release from prison, was made into a feature film, and "Pínzuǐ Zhāng Dàmín dē xìngfú shēnghuó" (The Happy Life of Chatter-box Zhang Damin; 贫嘴张大民的幸福生活) has been made into a television series in the same name.