Peter Hessler Explained

Peter Hessler
Birth Date:June 14, 1969
Occupation:Writer, journalist, runner
Language:English, Chinese, Egyptian Arabic
Nationality:American
Alma Mater:Princeton University
Mansfield College, Oxford
Spouse:Leslie T. Chang
Awards:MacArthur Fellowship
Kiriyama Prize
Nominated for National Book Award for Nonfiction
Pseudonym:何伟 (Hé Wěi) (in China)
Children:2

Peter Benjamin Hessler[1] (born June 14, 1969) is an American writer and journalist. He is the author of four books about China and has contributed numerous articles to The New Yorker and National Geographic, among other publications.[2] In 2011, Hessler received a MacArthur Fellowship in recognition of his "keenly observed accounts of ordinary people responding to the complexities of life in such rapidly changing societies as Reform Era China."[3]

Early life and education

Hessler grew up in Columbia, Missouri, and graduated from Hickman High School in 1988. In 1992, he graduated from Princeton University with an A.B. in English after completing a senior thesis titled "Dead Man's Shoes and Other Stories."[4] During his junior year, he studied in John McPhee's writing seminar.[5] After graduating from Princeton, Hessler received a Rhodes Scholarship to study English language and literature at Mansfield College, University of Oxford.[6]

The summer before graduating from Princeton, Hessler worked as a researcher for the Kellogg Foundation in southeastern Missouri. He wrote an extensive ethnography about the small town of Sikeston, which was published in the Society for Applied Anthropology.[7]

Career

Hessler joined the Peace Corps in 1996 and was sent to China for two years to teach English at Fuling Teachers College, in a small city near the Yangtze River in Sichuan, later Chongqing municipality.[8] [9] He later worked in China as freelance writer for publications such as the Wall Street Journal, the Boston Globe, the South China Morning Post, and National Geographic.[10] Hessler joined The New Yorker as a staff writer in 2000 and served as foreign correspondent until 2007.[11]

Hessler has written four books on China. (2001) is a Kiriyama Prize-winning book about his experiences in two years as a Peace Corps volunteer teaching English in China. (2006) features a series of parallel episodes featuring his former students, a Uighur dissident who fled to the U.S., and the archaeologist Chen Mengjia who committed suicide during the Cultural Revolution. His third book, (2010), is a record of Hessler's journeys driving a rented car from rural northern Chinese counties to the factory towns of southern China, and the significant economic and industrial growth taking place there. While his stories are about ordinary people's lives in China and not motivated by politics,[6] they nevertheless touch upon political issues or the lives of people who encountered problems during the Cultural Revolution, one example being that of the story of the archaeologist Chen Mengjia and his wife, poet and translator Zhao Luorui. In 2013, he published (2013), which, like his previous works, also covers China's ordinary people and life.

Hessler left China in 2007 and settled in Ridgway, Colorado,[12] where he continued to publish articles in The New Yorker on topics including the Peace Corps in Nepal and small towns in Colorado.

In October 2011, Hessler and his family moved to Cairo, where he covered the Middle East for The New Yorker.[13] In an interview upon being named a MacArthur Fellow in September 2011, he expressed his intention to spend much of the next year learning Arabic.[14] He said he envisioned spending five or six years in the Middle East.[15] While living there, he and his wife both learned Egyptian Arabic.[16] In 2019, he published The Buried: An Archaeology of the Egyptian Revolution, a book detailing his experiences of Egypt during the Arab Spring.

In August 2019, Hessler and his family moved to Chengdu in southwest China.[17] He taught nonfiction writing at Sichuan University - Pittsburgh Institute.[18] [19] [20] During his time in Chengdu, Hessler wrote several pieces for The New Yorker about how China handled the COVID-19 pandemic. Because Sichuan University-Pittsburgh Institute declined to renew his teaching contract, after some of his students reported Hessler's class, he and his family moved back to Colorado at the end of the first semester of 2021.[21] [22]

Since 2024, Hessler has coached track at a middle school in his hometown in Colorado.[23]

Personal life

Hessler is married to journalist and writer Leslie T. Chang.[24] [25] They have two children, twin daughters Natasha and Ariel, whom Hessler featured in a June 2023 New Yorker article.[26]

Bibliography

See main article: Peter Hessler bibliography.

References

  1. News: 32 U.S. Rhodes Scholars Are Selected to Study in Oxford for 1992. Associated Press. 1991-12-09. The New York Times. 2019-06-05. en-US. 0362-4331.
  2. Web site: Apostoaie . Ella . 2024-07-28 . Peter Hessler on China’s Past and Present . 2024-07-30 . The Wire China . en-US.
  3. Web site: MacArthur Fellows Program: Meet the 2011 Fellows Hessler, Peter Doctor of Letters, UMC conferred May 18, 2013. . John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. 20 September 2011.
  4. Hessler. Peter. 1992. Dead Man's Shoes and Other Stories.
  5. Web site: Peter Hessler: Q&A; with winner of MacArthur Foundation genius grant and cool half million - Denver News - the Latest Word . 2011-09-21 . 2011-09-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110928030627/http://blogs.westword.com/latestword/2011/09/journalist_peter_hessler_wins.php . dead .
  6. As stated by Hessler in "Oracle Bones: A Journey Between China's Past and Present", John Murray Publishers, London, 2006.
  7. http://www.nationalbook.org/nba2006_nf_hessler.html 2006 National Book Award Finalist, Nonfiction
  8. Hessler. Peter. The Peace Corps Breaks Ties with China. 2020-06-26. The New Yorker. en-us.
  9. Book: Hessler . Peter. River Town: two years on the Yangtze . 2001 . Harper Collins.
  10. Web site: Travel Writer: Peter Hessler. July 2002.
  11. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/bios/peter_hessler/search?contributorName=peter%20hessler Peter Hessler, The New Yorker
  12. http://hotmetalbridge.org/winter-2015/interview-peter-hessler/Right Times: An interview with Peter Hessler - Hot Metal Bridge
  13. Peter Hessler and Kay Ryan, 2011 Geniuses. The New Yorker. 20 September 2011.
  14. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Web site: Long-Form Journalist Peter Hessler: 2011 MacArthur Fellow MacArthur Foundation . YouTube.
  15. Web site: On the road less traveled . 2011-09-20 . 2011-04-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110411064708/http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/life/2011-04/01/content_12262713.htm . dead .
  16. "Talk Like an Egyptian", Letter from Cairo, New Yorker, April 17, 2017
  17. News: Foley . Dylan . Journalist Peter Hessler on Moving to Egypt After the Revolution . 30 August 2019 . Literary Hub . Literary Hub . August 28, 2019.
  18. News: 《寻路中国》作者何伟回来了,全家定居成都,任教四川大学 . Peter Hessler, the author of Country Driving, returned and his family settled in Chengdu to teach at Sichuan University. 30 August 2019 . The Paper . 30 August 2019 . zh.
  19. Web site: Peter Hessler . Sichuan University-Pittsburgh Institute . 10 September 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20200522204548/https://scupi.scu.edu.cn/en/faculty-staff-en/faculty-en/peter-hessler. 22 May 2020.
  20. News: Bures . Frank . Unearthing the Story: An Interview with Peter Hessler . 23 October 2019 . Longread . 2019-10-16.
  21. Web site: China author Peter Hessler loses teaching post at Sichuan University. South China Morning Post. 31 May 2021.
  22. Web site: Peter Hessler's Last Class. Yujia. He. Sixth Tone. July 19, 2021.
  23. https://www.chinafile.com/reporting-opinion/viewpoint/sideline-sinology Sideline Sinology
  24. Web site: Time Out Hong Kong – Book Reviews and Interviews | Interview: Leslie T. Chang . 2010-12-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100520032357/http://www.timeout.com.hk/books/features/18225/interview-leslie-t-chang.html . 2010-05-20 . dead .
  25. News: MacArthur Foundation 'genius grant' recipients. https://web.archive.org/web/20111016201752/http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2011/09/20/macarthur_foundation_genius_grant_recipients/ . October 16, 2011 .
  26. Hessler . Peter . The Double Education off My Twins' Chinese School . . . 27 June 2023.

External links