Dai Houying (; March 1938 – 25 August 1996) was a Chinese woman novelist,[1] and one of the first Chinese writers to criticize the devastating decade-long Cultural Revolution.
Her best known work is Stones in the Wall (人啊人|People, Oh People). “The novel [Stones of the Wall], published in 1980, was one of the first literary works to confront the excesses of the Chinese Cultural Revolution.”[2]
An early edition describes the book as “The First Major Novel to Come Out of Contemporary China. Written by a former Red Guard and set mostly in Shanghai in the late 1970s, this is a novel of how the Cultural Revolution of 1967 and the fall of the Gang of Four in 1977 affected one woman, her husband and their friends.”[3]
The book tells the story of intellectuals named Zhao Zhenhuan, Sun Yue and He Jingfu in the Cultural Revolution, a period Dai personally experienced as a persecutor—a red guard.
Dai received her bachelor's degree of Chinese literature from East China Normal University in 1960. She worked as a literary critic based in Shanghai until 1969 when she was accused of being a rightist during the Anti-Rightist Campaign.
Dai divorced her Red Guard husband in the spring of 1970 and that same year fell in love with the poet Wen Jie (闻捷) while they both were working in the countryside. They applied to get married but it was not approved. They were both criticized for their love. Unapologetic, Wen received even more intense criticism. Unable to continue without her he ended his life in January 1971.[4] Dai's novel Death of a Poet came out of that tragedy.[5]
Dai began writing novels in 1978. She wrote a famous trilogy about the fate of intellectuals in the Chinese Cultural Revolution. These works were Death of a Poet, Stones in the Wall, and Footsteps in the Void.
Her 1980 novel Stones in the Wall was a huge success selling over a half million copies[6] and stirred controversy because she advocated for Marxist humanism. As a consequence Dai was censored from 1983 to 1986.
Dai's work includes a wide range of essays, short stories, and novellas.[7] [8]
Dai taught literature at China's Fudan University in Shanghai until her life ended tragically in August 1996 when an intruder killed her and her niece.[9]