Wang Youqin

Wang Youqin (Chinese: 王友琴; born 1952) is a scholar specializing in East Asian studies and is currently a professor at the University of Chicago. Professor Wang is notable for her research on the Chinese Cultural Revolution, especially the Red August of Beijing. She is known for her research on the cultural revolution and compilation of lists of victims of the Cultural Revolution and their stories.

Early life and education
Wang was born in Beijing in 1952. After graduating from the Experimental High School Attached to Beijing Normal University, she was among the "educated youths" who were "sent down" to Yunnan Province during the Chinese Cultural Revolution. In 1979, she attended Peking University after the National College Entrance Examination was resumed in 1977 and ranked first in China. In 1988, she obtained her PhD in Literature from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and then left for the United States.

Research on the Cultural Revolution
Wang taught Chinese in Stanford University before moving to the University of Chicago in 1999. She is currently a Senior Instructional Professor in Chinese Language at the University of Chicago's Department of the East Asian Languages and Civilizations.

Professor Wang was among the first scholars to study the Red August of Beijing, the origin of the "Red Terror" of the Chinese Cultural Revolution, during which students attacked and even killed their teachers. This included the well-known murder of Bian Zhongyun, who was the first education worker in Beijing killed by Red Guards, including Bian's own students such as Song Binbin. Professor Wang has published papers and books about the individual victims of the Cultural Revolution. She also keeps an online record of hundreds of the victims and their families.

Major works

 * Victim of the Cultural Revolution --An Investigative Account of Persecution, Imprisonment and Murder, Open Magazine, May 2004, ISBN 9789627934127