Ding Ling (born October 12, 1904, Anfu [now Linli], Hunan province, China—died March 4, 1986, Beijing) was one of China’s most popular 20th-century authors. In her early career, Ding Ling initially wrote highly successful short stories centring on young, unconventional Chinese women. About 1930, with a distinct change in her artistic tendency, she became a major literary figure of the “leftist” literature.
Jiang Wei was brought up in a school founded by her mother after her father’s death in 1911. She was deeply affected by her mother’s independence and antitraditionalist views. At the beginning of 1922, Jiang Wei left Hunan for Shanghai, Nanjing, and Beijing, more to observe the intellectual life there than to study. During that period she developed an interest in anarchism. After a stint at Shanghai University, she went to Beijing, where in 1925 she met and fell in love with the leftist would-be poet Hu Yepin. With him she moved to the Western Hills outside Beijing.
Influenced by contemporary Chinese literary works and foreign literary masterpieces such as Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary and other European novels, Ding Ling began writing partly autobiographical short stories in which she developed a new kind of Chinese heroine—daring, independent, and passionate, yet perplexed and emotionally unfulfilled in her search for the meaning of life. Her chronicles of the aspirations and disappointments of modern Chinese women were an immediate success, but, because Hu Yepin was making little progress in his literary career, the couple moved to Shanghai in 1928 to start a literary magazine as a vehicle to publish his work. The venture failed, and Hu Yepin turned his attention to politics, joining the League of Left-Wing Writers. Ding Ling, however, devoted herself to writing, and by 1930 she had completed three collections of short stories and a novelette. Later that year she gave birth to a son and joined the League of Left-Wing Writers. Hu Yepin joined the Chinese Communist Party and became even more involved in politics. He was arrested by Nationalist authorities and executed in 1931. During those years Ding Ling’s work shifted to reflect the lives of workers, peasants, and revolutionaries, in which sentimentalism was replaced by revolutionary passion. She held a leading position in the League of Left-Wing Writers after she joined the Communist Party in 1932.
Ding Ling’s conversion to Marxism channeled her writing into a new and initially fruitful direction. Her proletarian-oriented Shui (1931; “Flood”) was acclaimed as a model of Socialist Realism in China. She was abducted by agents of the Nationalist Party in 1933 and imprisoned until 1936, when, disguised as a soldier, she escaped and joined the communists at Yan’an. There she became friendly with Communist Party leader Mao Zedong and was linked romantically with the general Peng Dehuai. She was not completely uncritical of the communist movement, expressing her dissatisfactions openly through her stories and in journal articles. For her stories “Zai yiyuan zhong” (“In the Hospital”) and “Ye” (“Night”) she was censured by the authorities.
Ding Ling’s officially successful proletarian novel Taiyang zhao zai Sangganhe shang (1948; The Sun Shines over the Sanggan River) was the first Chinese novel to win the Soviet Union’s Stalin Prize (1951). Yet despite her triumphs, she remained in political trouble for her open criticisms of the party, especially in regard to women’s rights. She was officially censured and expelled from the party as a rightist in 1957 and was imprisoned for five years during the Cultural Revolution. In 1975 she was freed, and her membership in the Communist Party was restored in 1979. Her later publications include several critical essays, short stories, and longer fictional prose. Selections of her work were published in English as Miss Sophie’s Diary and Other Stories (1985) and I Myself Am a Woman (1989).