Yang Mu

Yang Mu (Chinese: 楊牧; pinyin: Yáng Mù, September 6, 1940 – March 13, 2020) was a pen name of Wang Ching-hsien (王靖獻), a Taiwanese poet, essayist, critic, translator, Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature at the University of Washington, and Founding Dean at NDHU College of Humanities and Social Sciences and HKUST School of Humanities and Social Sciences. He is considered one of the most accomplished poets writing in Chinese in the 20th and 21st century, known for his lyricism and linguistic ingenuity, modernising the Chinese diction and syntax while reviving a sublime style out of the idiom and imagery of Chinese and Western poetic traditions.

Yang Mu
Native name
王靖獻
BornWang Ching-hsien
(1940-09-06)6 September 1940
Hualien County, Taiwan
Died13 March 2020(2020-03-13) (aged 79)
Cathay General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
Resting placeHualien County, Taiwan
Occupationpoet, essayist, critic, translator, professor in classical Chinese literature
LanguageChinese, English, Old English, German
EducationPh.D (Comparative Literature), the University of California, Berkeley
M.F.A. (English: Creative Writing), University of Iowa
B.A. (English), Tunghai University
Period1956–2020
Genrepoetry, prose
Notable awardsNational Culture and Arts Award (國家文藝獎)
Best Chinese Writing in the World (世界華文文學獎)
Newman Prize for Chinese Literature (紐曼華語文學獎)
Cikada Prize (瑞典蟬獎)
Website
yangmu.com

Yang Mu was praised by Swedish Academy member Göran Malmqvist as the Taiwan's poet closest to the Nobel Prize, whose work was translated into Swedish by him. He was the first Taiwanese winner of Newman Prize for Chinese Literature (2013) and Cikada Prize (2016).

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