Wai-lim Yip (Chinese: 葉維廉; Jyutping:Jip6 Wai4-lim4, pinyin: Yè Wéilián; born June 20, 1937), is a Chinese poet, translator, critic, editor, and professor of Chinese and comparative literature at UC San Diego. He received his PhD in comparative literature from Princeton University. He is also a visiting teacher at China's Peking University and Tsinghua University.
In 1970 he returned to National Taiwan University as a visiting professor of comparative literature. In 1980 he joined the Department of English at the Chinese University of Hong Kong as a visiting professor. Since then, he has visited mainland China many times, teaching comparative literature at Peking University and Tsinghua University.
Yip's poetic theory, relating modernist poetry to Taoist aesthetics, has been very influential in Taiwan.[4] In recent years he has been the object of considerable attention in China, with exhibitions of his archives and conferences devoted to his poetry, as well as publication of his Complete Works in nine volumes.[5]
Works
Ezra Pound's Cathay, Princeton University Press, 1969.
Modern Chinese Poetry: Twenty Poets from the Republic of China, 1955-65, University of Iowa Press, 1970.
^Michelle Yeh and N. G. D. Malmqvist, Frontier Taiwan: An Anthology of Modern Chinese Poetry (Columbia University Press, 2001: ISBN0-231-11846-5), p. 231.
^Wai-lim Yip, "Thank You, Paul," in A Community of Writers: Paul Engle and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, ed. Robert Dana (University of Iowa Press, 1999: ISBN0-87745-668-2), p. 107.