Li Yi
Professor
School of literature and journalism
Sichuan University
China
Biography
Li Yi, born in June 1966 in Chongqing, studied in Beijing Normal University in 1984, received a doctorate in literature in 2003. The incumbent Sichuan University School of literature and journalism professor of literature and journalism, Chinese modern and contemporary professional doctoral tutor. He has served as a member of the Academic Committee of Southwest Normal University, Associate Professor of Chinese Language Department of Southwest Normal University, Assistant to Dean of Faculty of Arts, Assistant Director of Literature Center of Southwest Normal University, Director of Chinese Poetics Research Center, Director of Collection and Research Center of Poetics Literature, Sichuan University Director of Modern Chinese Culture and Literature Research Center, editor-in-chief of Modern Chinese Culture and Literature, executive director of China Modern Literature Research Association, director of China Contemporary Literature Research Association, executive director of China Guo Moruo Research Association, vice president of Liang Shiqiu Research Association on both sides of the strait long. Mainly engaged in modern Chinese poetry, Lu Xun and the study of modern Chinese literary trends. Published in the academic monograph "Chinese modern poetry and classical poetry tradition", "modern Sichuan literature Bashu culture interpretation", "July school writer commentary", "modern: complicated Chinese melody", "southwest culture and new period poetry" , "Reading modern - on Lu Xun and Chinese modern literature", "for the modern life - Lu Xun reading notes", "Chinese modern poetry appreciation", "Japanese experience and the emergence of modern Chinese literature" and so on. Has become the Ministry of Education of the new century talent support plan selected in 2005, the National 100 outstanding doctoral thesis winners, enjoy the special government allowances of the State Council.
Research Interest
History of Chinese contemporary literature, Chinese contemporary literature, Chinese new poetry, Lu Xun study