Hao Jingfang
Hao Jingfang (郝景芳) won the Hugo Award for her novelette "Folding Beijing" — a story about a city divided into three rotating populations that share the same physical space but inhabit radically different worlds. It was only the second Hugo for a Chinese author, after Cixin Liu, and it announced a writer whose science fiction is as socially incisive as it is imaginatively bold.
Trained in physics and economics at Tsinghua University and Harvard, Hao brings a rare analytical rigor to her speculative fiction. Her work appears in major international anthologies, and she's become one of the most prominent voices in China's booming SF scene. She writes about inequality, labor, and the architecture of social systems with the precision of an economist and the compassion of a humanist — science fiction that illuminates the present as much as it imagines the future.