From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ye Yonglie in 1963

Ye Yonglie ( Chinese: 叶永烈; pinyin: Yè Yǒngliè, 30 August 1940 [1] – 15 May 2020 [2]) was a Chinese writer of science fiction and biographies. A few of his stories have been translated into English in The Road to Science Fiction series and elsewhere. During the " Anti-Spiritual Pollution Campaign" his works were attacked and a story he wrote in 1985 was suppressed for suggesting AIDS had entered the country. [3] As a biographer he wrote on early figures in the People's Republic of China. He also visited North Korea, and wrote a book The Real DPRK (真实的朝鲜) which was banned in that country and China. [4] [5]

References

  1. ^ Lorenzo Andolfatto, "Authors", in Shi Kong, Urania #1564, Mondadori, November 2010.
  2. ^ "著名作家叶永烈去世,享年80岁" (in Chinese). 2020-05-15.
  3. ^ Science Fiction Studies
  4. ^ Ye Yonglie, "How The Real DPRK Became a Banned Book", Open Magazine (开放杂志), September 2008
  5. ^ Joel Martinsen, North Korean complaints get a Chinese book banned, danwei.org, 11 September 2008. Retrieved 18 June 2013.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ye Yonglie in 1963

Ye Yonglie ( Chinese: 叶永烈; pinyin: Yè Yǒngliè, 30 August 1940 [1] – 15 May 2020 [2]) was a Chinese writer of science fiction and biographies. A few of his stories have been translated into English in The Road to Science Fiction series and elsewhere. During the " Anti-Spiritual Pollution Campaign" his works were attacked and a story he wrote in 1985 was suppressed for suggesting AIDS had entered the country. [3] As a biographer he wrote on early figures in the People's Republic of China. He also visited North Korea, and wrote a book The Real DPRK (真实的朝鲜) which was banned in that country and China. [4] [5]

References

  1. ^ Lorenzo Andolfatto, "Authors", in Shi Kong, Urania #1564, Mondadori, November 2010.
  2. ^ "著名作家叶永烈去世,享年80岁" (in Chinese). 2020-05-15.
  3. ^ Science Fiction Studies
  4. ^ Ye Yonglie, "How The Real DPRK Became a Banned Book", Open Magazine (开放杂志), September 2008
  5. ^ Joel Martinsen, North Korean complaints get a Chinese book banned, danwei.org, 11 September 2008. Retrieved 18 June 2013.

External links


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