Edward Wong

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Edward_Wong an entity of type: Thing

إدوارد وونغ (بالإنجليزية: Edward Wong)‏ هو محرر وصحفي ومراسل عسكري أمريكي، ولد في 14 نوفمبر 1972 في واشنطن العاصمة في الولايات المتحدة. rdf:langString
Edward Wong (born November 14, 1972) is an American journalist and a foreign correspondent for The New York Times. Wong served as one of the Times' primary correspondents in Baghdad, covering the Iraq War from November 2003 through June 2007. He then moved to the paper's Beijing bureau in April 2008, following a sabbatical at Middlebury College and the International Chinese Language Program (ICLP) in Taiwan improving his Mandarin. He eventually became the Beijing bureau chief for The New York Times, before leaving in 2017 to take up a Ferris Professorship of Journalism at Princeton University. He is currently a Nieman Fellow at Harvard. rdf:langString
rdf:langString إدوارد وونغ
rdf:langString Edward Wong
rdf:langString Edward Wong
rdf:langString Edward Wong
rdf:langString Washington, D.C., U.S.
xsd:date 1972-11-14
xsd:integer 10548535
xsd:integer 1117546900
xsd:date 1972-11-14
rdf:langString Edward Wong in 2013
rdf:langString journalist
rdf:langString إدوارد وونغ (بالإنجليزية: Edward Wong)‏ هو محرر وصحفي ومراسل عسكري أمريكي، ولد في 14 نوفمبر 1972 في واشنطن العاصمة في الولايات المتحدة.
rdf:langString Edward Wong (born November 14, 1972) is an American journalist and a foreign correspondent for The New York Times. Wong served as one of the Times' primary correspondents in Baghdad, covering the Iraq War from November 2003 through June 2007. He then moved to the paper's Beijing bureau in April 2008, following a sabbatical at Middlebury College and the International Chinese Language Program (ICLP) in Taiwan improving his Mandarin. He eventually became the Beijing bureau chief for The New York Times, before leaving in 2017 to take up a Ferris Professorship of Journalism at Princeton University. He is currently a Nieman Fellow at Harvard. Wong reports on China's politics, economy, environment, military, foreign policy and culture. He has covered recent signature events in China, including the Sichuan earthquake, the Beijing Olympics and unrest in Tibet and Xinjiang. Wong is the main writer on the Times' Culture & Control series, about the struggle among citizens and the state to shape the culture of China. He has also reported from Afghanistan, Tajikistan, North Korea, Myanmar, Mongolia, India, Indonesia, Vietnam and Taiwan. He has written travel stories about trekking in the mountains of Asia and South America. Born in Washington, D.C., Wong graduated from the University of Virginia in 1994 with a B.A. in English. In 1999, he earned dual master's degrees in journalism and international studies at the University of California, Berkeley. Wong's first newspaper job was at The Potomac Gazette in Potomac, MD. While attending graduate school at Berkeley, he wrote freelance stories for The Los Angeles Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, The San Jose Mercury News, Wired magazine and The Far Eastern Economic Review. Wong worked as an intern at The Associated Press in 1997. He started out at The New York Times as an intern in 1998 and went on to report for the metro, sports, business and foreign desks. Wong received the 2005 Livingston Award for International Reporting for his Iraq coverage. He was among a group of reporters from the Times' Baghdad bureau named as finalists for the 2008 Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting. He shared a 2010 Feature Writing prize from the Society of Publishers in Asia for the Times' 10-part Uneasy Engagement series, about China's growing influence in the world. An essay by Wong was published in Travelers' Tales: Tibet, an anthology of travel writing on Tibet. Wong appears in Laura Poitras' 2006 documentary about the Iraq War, My Country, My Country, and in Dexter Filkins' book, The Forever War. He has appeared on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer and The Charlie Rose Show, and speaks regularly on NPR, BBC and CBC.
rdf:langString The New York Times
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4940
xsd:gYear 1972

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