Qian Julie Wang

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born
Qian Wang

(1987-07-24) July 24, 1987 (age 38)[1]
Occupations
  • Writer
  • civil rights lawyer
Spouse
Marc Ari Gottlieb
(m. 2019)
[2]
Qian Julie Wang
Born
Qian Wang

(1987-07-24) July 24, 1987 (age 38)[1]
EducationSwarthmore College (BA)
Yale University (JD)
Occupations
  • Writer
  • civil rights lawyer
Spouse
Marc Ari Gottlieb
(m. 2019)
[2]
Children1 (daughter)
Qian Julie Wang
Simplified Chinese王乾
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWáng Qián

Qian Julie Wang (Chinese: 王乾) is a Chinese-American writer and civil rights lawyer.

Qian Wang was born in Shijiazhuang, China to academic parents.[3] Wang's mother was a professor of mathematics, while Wang's father was a professor of English and critic of the government, which led to the family being persecuted.[4][5] Wang's father fled China to the United States when she was five; Wang and her mother followed two years later in 1994.[4][6] After their temporary visas expired, the Wang family remained in the United States as undocumented immigrants in Brooklyn.[7]

Wang's father enrolled her at P.S. 124 in Chinatown, but few of her classmates and teachers spoke Mandarin Chinese, thus isolating her even within a seemingly familiar community.[8] Unable to speak English or Cantonese, Wang was initially placed in a special-needs classroom, but was returned to mainstream instruction after she was observed teaching herself to read English through picture books.[8] After school, Wang worked alongside her mother in clothing sweatshops and a sushi processing plant.[4]

Wang's early talent for writing was mistaken as plagiarism by an elementary school teacher, prompting her to deliberately hide her abilities throughout much of her primary education.[5] After several years in the US, Wang and her mother emigrated to Canada, in anticipation of better prospects, and her father followed sometime thereafter.[9] Wang returned to the United States to attend Swarthmore College.[9]

Her upbringing in poverty in America is the subject of Wang's breakout memoir Beautiful Country.[5][6]

Career

After graduating from Swarthmore College with a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature, Wang earned her Juris Doctor (J.D.) from Yale Law School in 2012.[3][5] She worked as an associate at Kirkland & Ellis and as an appellate litigator within the New York City Law Department before moving to Robins Kaplan, where she was elected to partnership within two years of joining the firm.[10]

Wang declined Robins Kaplan's offer of partnership and currently serves as managing director/partner of Gottlieb & Wang LLP, a law firm focusing on special needs children and civil rights impact litigation. She decided to start writing her memoir, Beautiful Country, in the wake of the 2016 US election of Donald Trump as president of the United States. She had been a naturalized American citizen for six months by this time.[6]

Wang wrote the book on her phone during her commute to her law offices, finishing a first draft in 2019 and publishing in 2021. She is working on a second book inspired by her experiences as an Asian-American working in corporate law.[3][6]

Personal life

See also

References

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