Cheng Youshu | |
---|---|
Born | 1924 (age 92–93) Beijing, China |
Pen name | Jin Sha (金沙) |
Occupation | Diplomat, poet |
Language | Chinese, English, Danish |
Alma mater | Saint John's University, Shanghai |
Period | 1937 - present |
Genre | Poetry |
Notable works |
The Surviving Rice Nb - Some Memories of Niels Henrik David Bohr |
Notable awards | The Surviving Rice 2005 3rd Lu Xun Literary Prize |
Spouse | Chen Luzhi (m. 1948) |
Children | 4 |
Relatives | Father: Cheng Shewo sister: Cheng Zhifan brother: Cheng Siwei |
Cheng Youshu (Chinese: 成幼殊; pinyin: Chéng Yòushū; born 1924) is a Chinese diplomat and poet. Cheng is fluent in English and Danish.
Cheng was born in Beijing in 1924, with her ancestral hometown in Xiangxiang, Hunan. Her father Cheng Shewo was a newspaperman. She is the second of three children. Her sister, Cheng Zhifan (Chinese: 成之凡) (born in 1928), is French Chinese. Her brother Cheng Siwei is a Chinese politician.
Cheng Youshu began writing poems at the age of 13. After high school, Cheng was accepted into Saint John's University, Shanghai, where she joined the Wenhui Fellowship—a Christian Fellowship.
In 1945, Cheng and her schoolmate founded the Yehuo Poetry Club (Chinese: 野火诗社). In May 1945, Cheng joined the Chinese Communist Party, and served in the New Fourth Army in Shanghai.
In 1948, Cheng went to Hong Kong to work as a reporter. While in Hong Kong, Cheng met her future husband, Chen Luzhi. Cheng married Chen (Chinese: 陈鲁直) in Hong Kong. They have four children.
In October 1949, Cheng moved in Guangzhou, her father went to Taiwan with Kuomintang.
After the founding of the PRC, Cheng worked in the Chinese Foreign Ministry. From 1955 to 1961, Cheng worked in India as a diplomat. In 1984, Cheng went to Denmark with her husband when he served as China's Ambassador to Denmark.