Lung Ying-Tai | |
---|---|
龍應台 | |
1st Minister of Culture of the Republic of China (Minister of Council for Cultural Affairs until 19 May 2012) | |
In office 6 February 2012 – 7 December 2014 | |
Deputy | George Hsu, Chang Yun-cheng, Lin Chin-tien George Hsu, Hung Meng-chi, Lee Ying-ping |
Preceded by | Ovid Tzeng Lin Chin-tian (acting) |
Succeeded by | Hung Meng-chi |
Personal details | |
Born | Daliao, Kaohsiung, Taiwan | 13 February 1952
Nationality | Taiwan (Republic of China) |
Children | Two sons |
Alma mater | National Cheng Kung University Kansas State University |
Lung Ying-tai (Chinese: 龍應台; pinyin: Lóng Yìngtái) is a writer, cultural critic, and public intellectual. With more than 30 books to her credit, she not only has a large number of readers in her native Taiwan, but her works also have an impact in Chinese-language communities in Hong Kong, China, Singapore, Malaysia, and North America.[1] Lung became widely known for her criticism on the Kuomintang party's martial law regime and has since become a critic of Mainland China's increasing restrictions on press freedom and civil liberties.[2][3] Her critical essays on cultural and political issues contributed to the democratization of Taiwan.[4]
Lung Ying-tai served as Taipei's first Cultural Bureau Chief (1999–2003)[5] and Taiwan's first Minister of Culture (2012–2014).[6] She established the Lung Ying-tai Cultural Foundation in 2005. She is currently engaged in full-time writing, residing in eastern Taiwan by the Pacific Ocean.
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