Check back for a complete, updated list of Mei’s latest interviews and media appearances. Writings, articles and talks by Mei Fong What We Lose When We Lose Female Reporters (The New York Times, Jan. 11, 2018) Sex Dolls Are Replacing China’s Missing Women: The country’s gender gap has left young men desperate for high-tech alternatives (Foreign Policy, Sep. 28, 2017) My son …
Continue Reading...In 1980, faced with a burgeoning population and its resultant economic pressures, China enacted a family-planning policy that would, with few exceptions, limit families to one child. Janet Song’s clear, smoothly paced narration is well suited to this fascinating and informative account of the effects of the one-child edict (which in 2015 was changed to a two-child policy). She guides …
Continue Reading...Listen to Mei’s interview here: https://lareviewofbooks.org/av/radio-hour-rainn-wilson-mei-fong-game-thrones This week’s show features more interviews from the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books. We talk with actor Rainn Wilson, author of a new memoir, The Bassoon King, and with Malaysian Chinese writer Mei Fong, a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and the author of One Child: The Story of China’s Most Radical Experiment. We also talk with LARB Senior Humanities Editor …
Continue Reading...It’s hard to put into words what runs through the mind when reading Mei Fong’s One Child – a gripping work that delves into China’s infamous policy. Though the policy was amended last year to allow couples to have two children, the legacy of the one child policy, introduced in 1979, runs deep and has had a huge impact on …
Continue Reading...“One Child” was named one of five must-read books in the first issue of the Economist’s 1843: One Child by Mei Fong A decade from now, the number of Chinese bachelors will outstrip the entire population of Saudi Arabia, and there will be more Chinese retirees than Europeans. As China begins to phase out its one-child policy, Mei Fong, a …
Continue Reading...Mei’s presentation at Sidwell Friends School: Since its inception 35 years ago, China’s “one child” policy has borne dramatic consequences for the country’s demographics, economy, and culture, said the 34th Annual John Fisher Zeidman ’79 Memorial Lecturer, Mei Fong, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist. The restrictions on family size originally were contrived so that the country’s resources would stretch among its many people. Enforcement …
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