In 2000, he began his career as Assistant Professor of Chinese Language and Literature at NDHU College of Humanities and Social Sciences and taught Chinese literature, creative writing, Mandopop, and nature writing courses. He was promoted to Associate Professor of Sinophone Literature in 2010 and become Professor of Sinophone Literature in 2012 respectively, through publications of his extraordinary creative writing works.[1][2]
Wu is known for writing environmental literature.[4] He is the author of several literary works, including collections of essays, short stories and novels. He is considered one of the major Taiwanese writers of his generation with writings translated into English, French, Turkish, Japanese, Korean, Czech and Indonesian.[5] In Chinese, he is especially well known for his non-fiction books on butterflies, The Book of Lost Butterflies (2000) and The Dao of Butterflies (2003), which he also designed and illustrated.[6]
In The Man with the Compound Eyes, an ecological parable or eco-fantasy,[7] he tells the story of a young Pacific islander, Atelie (Atile'i in the English translation), from the fictitious island of Wayo Wayo (suggesting Bora Bora) who arrives on the East Coast of Taiwan when the 'trash vortex', a floating mountain of trash which has formed out of the Great Pacific Trash Vortex, collides with the island. The book has been described as "a masterpiece of environmental literature about an apocalyptic aboriginal encounter with modernity...Trash, resource shortages, and the destruction of Taiwan's coastline as a result of the pursuit of unenlightened self-interest are unremarkable raw materials, but [Wu Mingyi] mashes them into art."[4] His literature agent described it as a "Taiwanese Life of Pi".[7]
His 2015 book The Stolen Bicycle has been described as a study of bicycles in Taiwan during World War II.[8] An English translation was published in 2017,[9] and in March 2018 the book was nominated for the Man Booker International Prize. It became the center of a diplomatic dispute when, after pressure from the People's Republic of China, the awards organizer changed his nationality from Taiwan to "Taiwan, China".[10] In April 2018, the Man Booker International Prize made the final call stating that "Wu Ming-Yi is listed as ‘Taiwan’".[11]
Publications
Novels
We're Closed Today 《本日公休》(Chiuko 九歌出版社,1997)
Grandfather Tiger 《虎爺》(Chiuko 九歌出版社,2003)
Routes in the Dream 《睡眠的航線》(2-fishes 二魚文化,2007)
The Man with the Compound Eyes 《複眼人》(Summer Festival 夏日出版社,2011) 304 Pages, published in English August 29, 2013 by Harvill Secker[12] Randomhouse Paperback and e book, 3 March 2015 and by Vintage Pantheon in North America in spring 2014.
The Magician on the Skywalk 《天橋上的魔術師》 (Summer Festival 夏日出版社,2011)
The Stolen Bicycle 《單車失竊記》(Cite Publishing Ltd. 麥田城邦文化,2015) 416 Pages, published in English August 28, 2017 by Text Publishing[13]
The Land of Little Rain 《苦雨之地》(Thinkingdom Media Group Ltd. 新經典文化,2019)
Essay Collections
The Book of Lost Butterflies 《迷蝶誌》(Wheat Field Press 麥田出版社,2000);(Reprinted by Summer Festival 夏日出版社,2010)
The Dao of Butterflies 《蝶道》(2-fishes 二魚文化,2003);修訂版(二魚文化,2010)
So Much Water So Close to Home 《家離水邊那麼近》(2-fishes 二魚文化,2007)
Above Flame 《浮光》(ThinKingDom 新經典文化,2014)
Literary Theory
Liberating Nature through Writing 《以書寫解放自然:台灣現代自然書寫的探索》(Da'an Press 大安出版社,2011);Reprinted under the name 'The Search for Modern Taiwanese Nature Writing 1980-2002:Liberating Nature through Writing' 《臺灣現代自然書寫的探索 1980-2002:以書寫解放自然 BOOK 1》(Summer Festival 夏日出版社,2011)
(Co-edited With Wu Sheng) Wetlands - Petrochemicals - Island Imagination 《溼地.石化.島嶼想像》(Unique Route 有鹿文化,2011)
Essays by Taiwanese Nature Writers 1980-2002: Liberating Nature through Writing, vol. 2 《臺灣自然書寫的作家論 1980-2002:以書寫解放自然 BOOK 2》(Summer Festival 夏日出版社,2011)
The Heart of Nature—From Nature Writing to Ecological Criticism: Liberating Nature through Writing, vol. 3 《自然之心─從自然書寫到生態批評:以書寫解放自然 BOOK 3》(Summer Festival 夏日出版社,2011)