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Bo Yang

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This article is about the Chinese writer. His name in Western languages is homonymic with Bó Yáng (Laozi).

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Guo Dingsheng
郭定生
BornGuo Dingsheng
(1920-03-07)7 March 1920
Kaifeng, Henan, Republic of China
Died29 April 2008(2008-04-29) (aged 88)
Xindian City, Taipei County (now Xindian District of New Taipei City), Taiwan
Pen nameBoyang
OccupationHistorian, writer, philosopher
LanguageChinese
NationalityRepublic of China
CitizenshipRepublic of China
Alma materNortheastern University
Period1950-2008

Boyang (simplified Chinese: 柏杨; traditional Chinese: 柏楊; pinyin: Bóyáng;[1] 7 March 1920[2] – 29 April 2008), also sometimes called Baiyang,[3] was a Chinese language writer based in Taiwan. His pen name is often written incorrectly in romanisation as "Bo Yang," as if his surname were actually Bo, but Boyang was simply a pen name he chose for himself during the 1960s in Taiwan. According to his own memoir, the exact date of his birthday was unknown even to himself. He later adopted the date of his imprisonment in 1968 (7 March) as his birthday.

Biography

Boyang was born as Guō Dìngshēng (郭定生) in Kaifeng, Henan Province, China, with family origins in Hui County (輝縣), now part of Xinxiang, Henan.[4] Boyang's father changed his son's name to Guō Lìbāng (郭立邦) to facilitate a transfer of schools. Boyang later changed his name to Guo Yìdòng (郭衣洞). In high school, Boyang participated in youth organisations of the Kuomintang, the then-ruling party of the Republic of China, and joined the Kuomintang itself in 1938. He graduated from the National Northeastern University, and moved to Taiwan after Kuomintang lost in the civil war in 1949.[5]

In 1950, he was imprisoned for six months for listening to Communist Chinese radio broadcasts. He worked various jobs, including as a teacher. During this time, he began to write novels. In 1960, he began using the penname Boyang, which he derived from a place name in the mountains of Taiwan because he liked the sound of it, to write a political commentary column in the Independent Evening News. In 1961, he achieved acclaim with his novel The Alien Realm (異域 Yìyù), which told the story of a Kuomintang force which fought on in the borderlands of southwestern China long after the government had retreated to Taiwan.

Boyang was arrested in 1967, and from 1969 was imprisoned as a political prisoner (for "being a Communist agent and attacking national leaders") on Green Island for nine years, because of his unwitting criticism of Taiwan's dictator Chiang Kai-shek and in particular a translation of a comic strip of Popeye.[6] In the strip, Popeye and Swee'Pea have just landed on an uninhabited island. Popeye says: "You can be crown prince," to which Swee'Pea responds, "I want to be president." In the next panel, Popeye says, "Why, you little..." In the final panel, Popeye's words are too faint to be made out. Chiang was displeased because he saw this as a parody of his installing his son Chiang Ching-kuo as heir apparent. Boyang translated the word "fellows" as "my fellow soldiers and countrymen," a phrase used by Chiang Kai-shek.[7] (Towards the end of his life Boyang wrote in his memoirs that he did not have the slightest intention to insult Chiang Kai-shek in with this translation.) The original 12-year sentence was commuted to eight years after the death of Chiang Kai-shek in 1975. However, the government refused to release Boyang after his sentence expired, until it gave in to pressure from international organisations such as Amnesty International. After his release, Boyang continued to campaign for human rights and democracy in Taiwan.

Works

One of his best known books is The Ugly Chinaman and the Crisis of Chinese Culture (醜陋的中國人 Chǒulòu de Zhōngguórén) published in Chinese in 1985 and in English translation in 1992. During his imprisonment, Bo Yang wrote a number of works on Chinese history.

Later Years

He lived in Taipei in his later years. He became the founding president of the Taiwan chapter of Amnesty International. Also in 1994, Boyang underwent heart surgery, and his health never fully recovered. He carried the honorary title of national policy advisor to the administration of President Chen Shui-bian. In 2006, Boyang retired from writing, and donated the bulk of his manuscripts to the Chinese Modern Literature Museum in Beijing. He was awarded an honourary doctorate by the National Tainan University, to which he also donated much memorabilia and some manuscripts.

Boyang died of pneumonia in a hospital near his Sindian residence on 29 April 2008.[2] He was married five times, and is survived by his last wife, Chang Hsiang-hua, and five children born by his former wives. On 17 May 2008, his ashes were scattered along the seashore of Green Island, where he was once imprisoned.

References

  1. ^ The character is traditionally pronounced "Bó". In Modern Standard Chinese, some authorities favour the view that it is pronounced as "Bó" except when used to mean "cypress tree", when it is pronounced "Bǎi": see “柏”, 《实用汉字字典》,上海辞书出版社 (Practical Chinese Character Dictionary, Shanghai Literary Press); “柏”,《辞海》,上海辞书出版社 1999 (Cihai, Shanghai Literary Press), while other authorities favour the view that 柏 is pronounced as "Bǎi" when used as a surname, see, e.g., Xinhua Zidian 10th edition, p.11, Commercial Press 2004, ISBN 7-100-03931-2, and Modern Chinese Dictionary (现代汉语词典) 5th edition, p.30, Commercial Press 2005, ISBN 7-100-04385-9 ). Boyang himself always pronounced it as "Bo".
  2. ^ a b 台灣著名作家柏楊因病逝世. BBC News Online (Chinese). 29 April 2008. Accessed 30 April 2008. Template:Zh icon
  3. ^ See, e.g., some books by Google Book Search.
  4. ^ 作家柏楊病逝. United Daily. April 29, 2008. Template:Zh icon
  5. ^ 柏楊凌晨病逝 享壽八十九歲. China Times. 29 April 2008. Accessed 30 April 2008. Template:Zh icon
  6. ^ June Teufel Dreyer. "Taiwan's Evolving Identity." 17 July 2003.
  7. ^ Daisy Hsieh. "Tragedy and Tolerance--The Green Island Human Rights Monument." Sinorama. July 1997. Accessed 30 April 2008.

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