Jenny Zhang (writer)

Jenny Zhang (born 1983) is an American writer, poet, and prolific essayist based in Brooklyn, New York.[1][2] One focus of her work is on the Chinese American immigrant identity and experience in the United States.[3][4] She has published a collection of poetry called Dear Jenny, We Are All Find and a non-fiction chapbook called Hags.[5] From 2011 to 2014, Zhang wrote extensively for Rookie. Additionally, Zhang has worked as a freelance essayist for other publications. In August 2017, Zhang's short story collection, Sour Heart, was the first acquisition by Lena Dunham's Lenny imprint, Lenny Books, via Random House.[3][6][7][8]

Jenny Zhang
Jenny Zhang
Born1983 (age 40–41)
NationalityChinese American
Other namesJenny Bagel
Alma materStanford University
Iowa Writers' Workshop
Occupation(s)Writer
Poet
Essayist
Years active2010-present

Early life

Zhang was born in Shanghai, China. When she was five years old, Zhang immigrated to New York City to join her father, who was studying linguistics at New York University, and mother, who had come to the United States after the Chinese Cultural Revolution.[9][10][11] Her father withdrew from the PhD program he was enrolled in, began to work as a teacher, and re-enrolled in school for computer programming, with the family eventually moving to Long Island where her father ran a computer repair business.[4][12][13] She has a younger brother.[3][14]

In 2005, Zhang graduated from Stanford University with a BA in Comparative Studies in Race & Ethnicity. In 2009, Zhang received a Master of Fine Arts in fiction from the Iowa Writers' Workshop.[15][16]

Career

After college, Zhang moved to San Francisco where she worked as a union organizer for Chinese home healthcare workers and as an organizer for the writing non-profit 826 Valencia which helps children and young adults learn how to write.[11][15] Zhang spent a summer in Hungary teaching English as a second language.[11][17]

While in graduate school at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, Zhang taught creative writing to undergraduates at University of Iowa.[18] Zhang then taught high school students in the Bronx, Queens, and Brooklyn. She has also taught at the New School for Social Research and at Sackett Street Writers' Workshop.[19]

From 2011 to 2014, Zhang was a regular contributor to the online magazine for teen girls, Rookie, for which she has written both fiction and nonfiction since the magazine's inception.[20]

Among the essays Zhang wrote for Rookie were a 2012 tribute to the rapper M.I.A.,[21] The Importance of Angsty Art, an essay on embracing "bad" writing,[22] Odd Girl In, an essay about the conflict between the impulse to rebel and the desire to join political movements, partly based on Zhang's experiences with organizing and activism in San Francisco,[23] Empathy Excess, an essay about emotional abuse and the limits of empathy,[24] and Far Away From Me, an essay about the search for decolonized love, a conflicted teenage love for Weezer, and a deconstruction and investigation into fetishization, objectification, and internalized racism.[25]

In 2012, Zhang published a collection of poetry called Dear Jenny, We Are All Find.[19][26] Zhang had written some of the poems that made up the collection during her time at Iowa Writers' Workshop, which she did in secret as the poetry program was separate from her fiction program.[27] She wrote the rest of the poems while living in the south of France. The poems were submitted to a contest for a small press, Octopus Books.[28]

In 2014, Lena Dunham asked her to join a promotional tour for her book, Not That Kind of Girl. This later led to Dunham publishing Zhang's 2017 book, Sour Heart.[29]

2015's "Hags" is an essay Zhang wrote in one night after watching Senator Wendy Davis do a 13-hour filibuster of SB5, a Texas Senate bill that sought to limit access to abortion services. It was then published by Guillotine Books as a limited edition chapbook.[3][26]

In July 2015, Zhang published an essay called "How It Feels" for an issue of Poetry magazine that was curated by Tavi Gevinson. The essay was a meditation on depression, suicide, excess, Tracey Emin, and poetry.[30] It was nominated for a National Magazine Award.[7][31]

In August 2015, one of Zhang's stories was included in the first issue of Lena Dunham's Lenny newsletter.[32]

In September 2015, Zhang wrote about issues of racism in the literary community for BuzzFeed.[9][15]

In August 2017, Zhang's short story collection, Sour Heart, was published by Lena Dunham's Lenny Books imprint on Random House.[6][33] Many of the stories were written and evolved over a long period of time, with the oldest having initially been written when Zhang was 19 years old, the short story called "The Evolution of My Brother."[3] Zhang said that the title and theme of the book came from a wish "to convey the unreality of childhood, the sweetness and the sourness of being so small, so helpless, and so dependent on adults. We tend to render childhood as purely idyllic and innocent, or totally nightmarish and traumatic, but there's a spectrum of nuance that lies between."[34] Sour Heart, a group of seven bildungsroman stories, received positive reviews.[35][36][37]

In May 2019, it was announced that Sour Heart would be made into a movie, to be directed by Cathy Yan[38].

Selected works and publications

In chronological order by section

Poetry

  • Zhang, Jenny (Summer 2012). "Everyone's Girlfriend" (PDF). Clock (3). Florence, MA: O'clock Press: 10–11.
  • Zhang, Jenny (December 2012). "Flush in the spirals of black holes". Coconut (15).
  • Zhang, Jenny (16 December 2012). "The Last Five Centuries Were Uneventful". HTMLGIANT.
  • Zhang, Jenny (January 2013). "seppuku". Sink Review (10).
  • Zhang, Jenny (January 2013). "goo goo water". Sink Review (10).
  • Zhang, Jenny (26 April 2013). "The Universal Energy Is About to Intervene in Your Life". Bomb. Archived from the original on 7 October 2017. Retrieved 8 September 2015.[39]
  • Zhang, Jenny (26 April 2013). "MY BABY FIRST BIRTHDAY". Bomb. Archived from the original on 7 October 2017. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  • Zhang, Jenny (Spring 2013). "My baby first birthday". Pinwheel (2).
  • Zhang, Jenny (Spring 2013). "You are the poorest person here". Pinwheel (2).
  • Zhang, Jenny. "uncle boo." Adult
  • Zhang, Jenny. "My baby first birthday." Adult
  • Zhang, Jenny (Fall 2013). "I would have no pubes if I were truly in love" (PDF). Adult (1). Third Rail Quarterly: 9–10.[40]
  • Zhang, Jenny (Fall 2013). "It was a period when cunt was in the air" (PDF). Adult (1). Third Rail Quarterly: 67.
  • Zhang, Jenny (25 June 2014). Adult. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Zhang, Jenny (26 September 2014). "I Would Have No Pubes If I Were Truly In Love". The Hairpin. Archived from the original on March 6, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Zhang, Jenny (7 November 2014). "I'm a 30 year old White non racist male, with some of my closest friends being Black". The Hairpin. Archived from the original on March 6, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Zhang, Jenny (November 2014). Dumb Theory. Prelude.
  • Zhang, Jenny (22 January 2015). "It Is Finally Midsummer". The Hairpin. Archived from the original on March 6, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Zhang, Jenny (27 February 2015). "Is There A Way To Drain A Lake You Are Afraid You Will One Day Drown In?". The Hairpin. Archived from the original on October 7, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Zhang, Jenny (27 March 2015). "Anaphora". The Hairpin. Archived from the original on April 10, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Zhang, Jenny (2015). "Don't Fucking Text Your Friends When I'm Reading A Poem It Took Two Years to Write". In Lauer, Lynn; Melnick, Lynn (eds.). Please Excuse This Poem: 100 New Poets for the Next Generation. New York: Viking/Penguin. ISBN 978-1-101-61538-6. OCLC 905345570.
  • Zhang, Jenny (4 August 2017). "Follow Him". BuzzFeed.

Non-fiction

Fiction, poetry, and essay collections

Other works

Video
  • "The Last Five Centuries Were Uneventful"
  • "Comefarts"
Photography

Honors

References