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Jiayang Fan (Chinese: 樊嘉扬; pinyin: Fán Jiāyáng; born 4 August 1984) is a Chinese-American journalist. She was born in Chongqing and immigrated to the United States at the age of seven. She has been a staff writer for The New Yorker since 2016.
Jun 5, 2023 · Jiayang Fan covers China, American politics, and culture for The New Yorker. She writes about topics such as food, immigration, dissent, and identity in China and the U.S.
- Condé Nast
Sep 7, 2020 · Jiayang Fan reflects on the separation from her mother, who suffers from A.L.S., during the pandemic, and on the online sensation her story became for Chinese nationalists.
- Jiayang Fan
Jun 5, 2023 · Personal History. A Mother’s Exchange for Her Daughter’s Future. Two lives bound into one story by immigration and illness. By Jiayang Fan. June 5, 2023. The author and her mother, in...
- Jiayang Fan
Sep 20, 2020 · NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Jiayang Fan, staff writer for The New Yorker, about her piece, "Motherland," which is featured in a recent issue of the magazine.
Nonfiction. The Rare Writer Who Hates the Word ‘I’. In “Dear Friend, From My Life I Write to You in Your Life,” Yiyun Li recounts abandoning Chinese in order to write in English. By Jiayang...
Jiayang Fan is a staff writer at The New Yorker, covering culture, politics and society. She graduated from Williams College in 2006 and has 432 followers and 287 connections on LinkedIn.
- The New Yorker