Yi Lei

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Yi Lei
Native name
伊蕾
BornAugust 30, 1951
Tianjin, China
DiedJuly 13, 2018(2018-07-13) (aged 66)
Iceland
OccupationPoet
NationalityChinese

Yi Lei (Chinese: 伊蕾, 1951–2018), born Sun Guizhen, was a Chinese poet of the 20th and early 21st centuries.[1] She first came to prominence with the publication of her poem, "A Single Woman’s Bedroom", in 1987 in People's Literature magazine.[2]

Biography[edit]

Early years[edit]

Yi Lei was born in Tianjin in 1951, the oldest of five children.[2] Her father was a steelworker father and her mother did embroidery work.[2] The family lived in close knit quarters in, "a brick-and-tile building with a handful of other families."[2] According to The New Yorker, "as a child, Yi Lei spent a lot of time with her uncle, a clerk at a pharmaceutical company who was infatuated with literature. By grade school, she was reading Pushkin and felt a kind of kinship with the poet. Her schooling came to a halt with the Cultural Revolution, in 1966."[2] At that point, as part of a "reeducation movement," she was sent to the countryside.[2] By the early seventies, Yi Lei had become a radio broadcaster at a Luyuan steel factory in rural Hebei Province.[3][2] There, she started to, "write poems set in farmlands and factories."[2]

Education and Career[edit]

While in Luyuan, Yi Lei shared an apartment with a close friend, Li Yarong.[3] When Li Yarong met Yi Lei, she had just lost her fiancé to leukemia.[2][3] It was only after her fiancé's death that she begin to publish under the name, 'Yi Lei.' [3]

Yi Lei studied creative writing at the Lu Xun Academy and subsequently received a BA in Chinese literature from Peking University.[1] In 1992, Yi Lei moved to Moscow, only returning to Tianjin in 2002.[2]

Yi Lei published eight poetry collections in her lifetime; her work has been translated into Japanese, French, Italian, Russian, and English.[1] In addition to her work as a poet, Yi Lei worked as a reporter for the Liberation Army, and as a staff member for the newspaper The Railway Corps.[1]

Awards[edit]

Yi Lei was a recipient of the Zhuang Zhong Wen Literature Prize (also Zhuang Chongwen | 庄重文文学奖), a prize that is awarded every other year to a writer under the age of 40.[1][4]

Death[edit]

Yi Lei died suddenly of a heart attack while on a 2018 trip to Iceland.[2]

Influences[edit]

Yi Lei discovered the poems of Walt Whitman in her late twenties and a line of his ("I will not make a poem nor the least part of a poem but has reference to the soul"), "became lifelong guidance and sent her off the path of communist motifs."[2]

Translation[edit]

Poet Tracy K. Smith asked Yi Lei, "through an intermediary," as to whether, "she might translate her work with something less than literal fidelity, aiming for a 'similar spirit or feeling for readers of American English.'"[3] After some back and forth, Yi Lei gave Smith permission to do just that.[3] The two poets met in January, 2014 at a restaurant in New York City's Chinatown.[2] Smith worked with Changtai Bi, a longtime friend of Yi Lei's who taught English at a local college in Tianjin - Bi would translate Yi Lei's poems literally, Smith would then rework them to be more faithful sense-wise and Changtain Bi would then translate Smith's work back into Mandarin for Yi Lei's approval.[3][2] This process was unexpectedly cut short by Yi Lei's death in 2018, but her works, as translated/interpreted by Smith and Changtai Bi were published under the title of, My Name Will Grow Wide Like a Tree, the first major collection of Yi Lei's poems translated into English.[3][5] It was shortlisted for the 2021 Griffin Poetry Prize.[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Yi Lei". Poets.org. Retrieved March 16, 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Zhang, Han (May 5, 2021). "The Second Life of Yi Lei's Poetry". The New Yorker. ISSN 2163-3827. Retrieved March 16, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Fisher, Jamie (2024). "Ecstasy Inside the Lines". Harvard Review. 61: 36–49. ISSN 1077-2901.
  4. ^ Chen, Dongmei. "Chinese Literature Prizes". Global Literature in Libraries Initiative. Retrieved March 16, 2024.
  5. ^ a b "My Name Will Grow Wide Like a Tree". Graywolf Press. Retrieved March 16, 2024.

Translations into English[edit]

  • Tracy K. Smith and Changtai Bi (translators) (2020). My Name Will Grow Wide Like a Tree (Graywolf Press, 2020). ISBN 978-1-64445-040-6.

External links[edit]

Poems available in translation online (note that some are more like interpretations rather than literal translations):