Korea's Distinguished Asian Poet award (1994), the Rong-hou Taiwanese Poet Prize (1997), India's Poets International Prize (2000), Taiwan's Lai Ho Literature Prize and Premier Culture Prize (2001), the Michael Madhusadan Poet Award (2002), the Wu San-lien Prize in Literature (2004) and Poet Medal of the Mongolian Cultural Foundation (2005).
Li Kuei-hsien (Chinese: 李魁賢; pinyin: Lǐ Kuíxián; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lí Khoe-hiân; born 1937) is a Taiwanese author, poet, cultural critic, translator, and inventor, born and raised in Taipei during the period of Japanese rule. He mainly writes poetry, but also provides reviews and translations.
He began writing poems in 1953 upon his graduation from the Taipei Institute of Technology. He is noted for writing extended verse in Taiwanese Hokkien and represents an influential figure in the Taiwanese literature movement. Li's work today appears in multi-volume sets of collected poems published in 2001, 2002, and 2003. His "February 28th Incident Requiem" was set to music in 2008 by composer Fan-Long Ko. Translations of Li's poems have been published in Japan, Korea, Russia, New Zealand, Mongolia, India, the former Yugoslavia, Romania, Greece, Spain, the Netherlands and Canada. Li has also translated poems and edited collections of modern poems from Italy and other European sources.
Lee authored Columbarium and Others and Selected Poems of Li Kuei-hsien.
Activities
Lee Kuei-shien started publishing poetry in 1953. In 1964, he joined the Li Poetry. Proficient in German, he was responsible for selecting German poems. Lee also ventured into the magazine publishing industry, serving as the production editor of the Invention magazine, president of Invention World magazine, and publisher of the Invention Enterprise magazine.
He has been awarded Korea's Distinguished Asian Poet award (1994), the Rong-hou Taiwanese Poet Prize (1997), India's Poets International Prize (2000), Taiwan's Lai Ho Literature Prize and Premier Culture Prize (2001), the Michael Madhusadan Poet Award (2002), the Wu San-lien Prize in Literature (2004) and Poet Medal of the Mongolian Cultural Foundation (2005). He was nominated three times as a candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature by the Indian International Society of Poets in 2001, 2003, and 2006.[4][5][2]
Printed program booklet, 2-28 Requiem by Fan-Long Ko. 1 DVD. National Taiwan Normal University, 2008.
^Chen, Ying-chou (2022). "專訪李魁賢 寫詩像抽鴉片,很難戒掉" [Interview with Lee Kuei-shien: Writing Poetry is Like Quitting Opium, Very Hard to Give Up]. Wenhsun (443): 71–77.
^ ab「臺灣意象 文學先行——李魁賢捐贈展」展覽圖錄 ["Taiwan Imagery: Pioneering Literature - Lee Kuei-shien Donation Exhibition" Exhibition Catalog]. Tainan City: National Museum of Taiwan Literature. 2017. ISBN978-986-05-3812-0.
^Mo, Yu, ed. (2016). 臺灣現當代作家研究資料彙編87‧李魁賢 [Research Materials on Contemporary Taiwanese Writers Volume 87 - Lee Kuei-shien]. Tainan City: National Museum of Taiwan Literature. ISBN978-986-05-0141-4.
^Lee, Kuei-shien (2002). "我被提名諾貝爾文學獎的來龍去脈" [The Background of My Nomination for the Nobel Prize in Literature]. In Peng, Jui-chin (ed.). 李魁賢文集第九冊 [The Collected Works of Lee Kuei-shien]. Vol. 9. Taipei: Council for Cultural Affairs, Executive Yuan. pp. 318–322.