By David Kirton
SHENZHEN, China (Reuters) – American author and New Yorker writer Peter Hessler has said the Chinese university where he has been teaching non-fiction writing has not renewed his contract for the next academic year and that he will leave the country at the end of the semester.
Since 2019, Hessler has been based in the city of Chengdu, where he is an assistant professor at the Sichuan University-Pittsburgh Institute. He has been a staff writer with the New Yorker since 2000.
In a statement shared via social media platform Douban on Sunday, he said that he had hoped to continue teaching at the university but was not offered a contract for the next academic year. Reached by Reuters, Hessler said he declined to comment beyond the statement.
“I want to emphasize that I have greatly enjoyed being back in the classroom after more than twenty years,” the statement said.
The statement said Hessler and his family would return to Colorado in the summer, and did not elaborate on why his contract was not renewed.
Hessler’s friend He Yujia, who posted the statement on his behalf, said it appeared to have been subsequently removed from Douban and she was not notified.
Neither the institute, the New Yorker, China’s Foreign Ministry nor Douban immediately replied to requests for comment.
Hessler, 51, has written four well-known books in English on China since he first moved as a U.S. Peace Corps volunteer English teacher in the mid-1990s to a small city in the southwest, which became the basis for his 2001 non-fiction book “River Town”.
Chinese-language translations of three of Hessler’s books on China are available on the mainland, and a New Yorker piece published last August was praised inside the country for its depiction of how China dealt with the Covid-19 outbreak.
In March, Hessler participated in the China Development Forum, a high-profile government-run event, where he spoke on a panel on media perspectives of how the Covid-19 outbreak was handled in Wuhan, the Chinese city where it first emerged.
China has increasingly curbed foreign influence in its education system in recent years, and last year introduced draft rules that would see foreign teachers fired for “words and deeds” considered harmful to the country’s sovereignty.
It has also been clamping down on foreign media, and expelled more than a dozen journalists working for U.S. media organisations in 2020 as relations with the United States plummeted over the coronavirus pandemic, China’s treatment of Uyghurs and a festering trade dispute.
Washington also slashed the number of journalists permitted to work in the United States at four major Chinese state-owned media outlets.
(This story was refiled to fix typo in para 9.)
(Reporting by David Kirton; Editing by Tony Munroe and Raju Gopalakrishnan)