Zi Zhongyun
来自China Digital Space
Zī Zhōngyún 资中筠
Zi Zhongyun (born 1930) is a retired diplomat, scholar and translator. She is a public intellectual and essayist known for her outspoken criticism of political and social issues in China.
Born to a scholarly family, Zi studied English and French at Yenching University and Tsinghua University. In the early 1950s, Zi began working as a translator and diplomat before becoming a researcher in the late 1970s. From 1985 to 1992, she led the Institute of American Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Since her retirement in 1996, Zi continued her research and writing on diplomacy and political affairs. She is known as a leading public intellectual who has published extensively on social issues in China including corruption, lack of upward mobility, and unequal access to education. Her interviews and essays are often subject to censorship.
In March 2019, Zi Zhongyun [https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2019/04/tsinghuas-pond-too-shallow-for-real-fish-responses-to-xu-zhangruns-suspension/
wrote an essay in support of Xu Zhangrun], then a law professor at Tsinghua University who had publicly criticized President Xi Jinping. Xu was suspended in March 2019 and dismissed by Tsinghua earlier this year. In her essay titled “My Tsinghua Lament” 哀清华, Zi Zhongyun castigate her alma mater for suspending Xu and called for respect for intellectual freedom.
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