Wu Jiani was one of the most accomplished gymnasts of the early 1980s. At sixteen, she won three gold medals at the 1982 Asian Games and received the only perfect 10 awarded in the women’s competition. A year earlier, she had claimed a bronze medal on balance beam at the World Championships in Moscow, and her shoulder-destroying uneven bars release—commonly called the “Jiani Leap”— was recognized by the International Gymnastics Federation. She would later help China earn its first Olympic team medal in women’s artistic gymnastics, taking bronze at the 1984 Los Angeles Games.
The four profiles translated here, written between 1980 and 1983, are less interested in those achievements than in explaining how they became possible. Each returns to her unlikely beginning in the sport. Wu arrived at the national team with protruding knee joints, stiff ankles, and legs so weak that coaches compared them to those of a child recovering from polio. She failed to finish among the top thirty at her first national championships. Coaches reportedly decided three separate times to send her home, only to relent after watching her climb back onto the apparatus following yet another fall. Again and again, the articles attribute her transformation not to extraordinary talent but to extraordinary persistence: endless repetitions, late-night conditioning sessions, and an almost preternatural refusal to complain.
Read together, the profiles reveal something larger than the career of a single gymnast. They belong to a recognizable genre of Chinese sports writing in which athletic excellence serves as evidence of moral character. Wu’s story—frail child, repeated setbacks, silent perseverance, eventual triumph—was a narrative that readers would have recognized from countless profiles of elite athletes during the reform era. The details vary from article to article, but the structure remains remarkably consistent.
The differences are equally revealing. Three of the profiles were written for readers inside China and dwell on physical shortcomings, repeated failure, and the harsh demands of elite training. The fourth profile appeared in the English-language edition of China Pictorial, a Chinese state magazine published for overseas readers. Unlike the domestic profiles, it smooths away many of the rough edges. The malformed joints disappear, the coaches no longer contemplate sending her home, and the emphasis shifts to a determined girl practicing on a log in her bedroom before emerging as an international champion. Read side by side, the four articles offer not only a portrait of one of China’s pioneering gymnasts but also a glimpse of how the country chose to tell different versions of the same sporting success to domestic and international audiences.









