Jung Chang
Jung Chang (born 1952) is a Chinese-born British writer and historian renowned for her memoir Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China (1991), which chronicles the lives of her grandmother, mother, and herself across twentieth-century China, selling over 15 million copies worldwide and becoming a banned yet influential account of communist rule's personal tolls.[1] Raised in Sichuan Province by parents who were Communist Party officials, Chang endured the Cultural Revolution as a peasant, barefoot doctor, steelworker, and electrician before departing for Britain in 1978, where she earned a PhD in linguistics from the University of York in 1982 as the first person from communist China to receive a British doctorate.[1][2] Chang's subsequent works, including the co-authored biography Mao: The Unknown Story (2005) with Jon Halliday, portray Mao Zedong as a ruthless leader responsible for approximately 70 million deaths through policies like the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution, drawing on archival research but facing criticism from some China specialists for alleged factual inaccuracies and selective sourcing amid broader academic tendencies to downplay communist atrocities.[1] Later books such as Empress Dowager Cixi: The Concubine Who Launched Modern China (2013) and Big Sister, Little Sister, Red Sister (2019) revisit Chinese history with revisionist lenses challenging state narratives.[1] Honored with a CBE and multiple honorary degrees, Chang's writings have sparked global debate on China's past, often prioritizing eyewitness testimony and declassified materials over ideologically filtered interpretations prevalent in certain scholarly circles.[1]