writingchina.net
Ghosts gathering in Shanghai: ACCL Fudan 2015 | Writing China
https://writingchina.net/2015/08/15/ghosts-gathering-in-shanghai-accl-fudan-2015
Sharing a Dream: The Lucid Dreamscapes of Jorge Luis Borges and Can Xue. House Without a Ceiling. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Dissolved into Wine and World. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. Language and Body in Chinese Literature. Ghosts gathering in Shanghai: ACCL Fudan 2015. Asymp; 1 Comment. Legend of the white snake. The Association of Chinese and Comparative Literature. At this years ACCL conference. First speaker Jessica Imbach. From Brown University found supernatural elements in th...
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Dissolved into Wine and World | Writing China
https://writingchina.net/conferenceworkshop-abstracts/dissolved-into-wine-and-world
Sharing a Dream: The Lucid Dreamscapes of Jorge Luis Borges and Can Xue. House Without a Ceiling. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Dissolved into Wine and World. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. Language and Body in Chinese Literature. Dissolved into Wine and World. Alcohol and identity in Mo Yan’s. The Republic of Wine. Presented at the conference Commensality and Social Organisation. Held at the Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies. At the University of Copenhagen in October 2011.
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Cross-Cultural Detectives | Writing China
https://writingchina.net/conferenceworkshop-abstracts/cross-cultural-detectives
Sharing a Dream: The Lucid Dreamscapes of Jorge Luis Borges and Can Xue. House Without a Ceiling. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Dissolved into Wine and World. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. Language and Body in Chinese Literature. 8211; The mutual cultural fascination in early 20th century Chinese and Western crime fiction. Presented at the ‘ Popular Cultures in and of and out of Asia. 8216; panel at the 6th annual International Asian Dynamics Initiative Conference. This paper investigates...
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House Without a Ceiling | Writing China
https://writingchina.net/conferenceworkshop-abstracts/house-without-a-ceiling
Sharing a Dream: The Lucid Dreamscapes of Jorge Luis Borges and Can Xue. House Without a Ceiling. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Dissolved into Wine and World. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. Language and Body in Chinese Literature. House Without a Ceiling. Uncanny places in the works of Can Xue. To be presented in the panel ‘Modern Chinese Culture and the Uncanny: Superstition as a Critique of Enlightenment’ at The Association of Chinese and Comparative Literature Conference. Can Xue’s stor...
utopian-studies.org
Utopian Resources | The Society for Utopian Studies
http://utopian-studies.org/utopian-resources
Arthur O. Lewis Award. Kenneth M. Roemer Innovative Course Design Award. Larry E. Hough Distinguished Service Award. Lyman Tower Sargent Award for Distinguished Scholarship. We’d love your contributions! If you would like to add utopia-related resources to this list, please email the links/descriptions to admin@utopian-studies.org. Society for Utopian Studies Resources. Alex Hall, a PhD student at Kent State University, has taken on the task of resurrecting the Society for Utopian Studies newsletter,.
writingchina.net
Det menneskeædende samfund | Writing China
https://writingchina.net/publications/det-menneskeaedende-samfund
Sharing a Dream: The Lucid Dreamscapes of Jorge Luis Borges and Can Xue. House Without a Ceiling. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Dissolved into Wine and World. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. Language and Body in Chinese Literature. 8220;Det menneskeædende samfund – Lu Xuns brug af kannibalisme som litterært motiv”. Trappe Tusind – Tidsskrift for litteraturvidenskab. Nr 6, juni 2011. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:.
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Crime Fiction | Writing China
https://writingchina.net/category/crime-fiction-2
Sharing a Dream: The Lucid Dreamscapes of Jorge Luis Borges and Can Xue. House Without a Ceiling. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Dissolved into Wine and World. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. Language and Body in Chinese Literature. Ghosts gathering in Shanghai: ACCL Fudan 2015. August 15, 2015. Tales of snake women, cinematic phantoms and apocalyptic comets filled the small meeting room at one of the top floors …. Continue reading →. March 22, 2015. I must confess myself fittingly ….
writingchina.net
Den Daoistiske Ædedolk | Writing China
https://writingchina.net/publications/314-2
Sharing a Dream: The Lucid Dreamscapes of Jorge Luis Borges and Can Xue. House Without a Ceiling. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Dissolved into Wine and World. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. Language and Body in Chinese Literature. Den Daoistiske Ædedolk: Daoisme og spisning i Ah Chengs novelle Kongen af Skak. CHAOS Skandinavisk tidsskrift for religionshistoriske studier. Chaos nr. 59. Årgang 2013, vol. I. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Address never made public).
writingchina.net
Dissolved in Liquor and Life | Writing China
https://writingchina.net/publications/dissolved-in-liquor-and-life
Sharing a Dream: The Lucid Dreamscapes of Jorge Luis Borges and Can Xue. House Without a Ceiling. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Dissolved into Wine and World. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. Language and Body in Chinese Literature. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. 8216;Dissolved in Liquor and Life: Drinkers and Drinking Cultures in Mo Yan’s Novel, Liquorland’. Commensality: From Everyday Food to Feast. Susanne Kerner, Cynthia Chou, Morten Warmind (Eds.). London: Bloomsbury. China in ten words.
writingchina.net
Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’ | Writing China
https://writingchina.net/conferenceworkshop-abstracts/daoism-and-eating-in-ah-chengs-chess-king
Sharing a Dream: The Lucid Dreamscapes of Jorge Luis Borges and Can Xue. House Without a Ceiling. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Dissolved into Wine and World. Dissolved in Liquor and Life. Language and Body in Chinese Literature. Daoism and eating in Ah Cheng’s ‘Chess King’. Presented at the yearly symposium for ‘CHAOS – The Scandinavian Journal for the History of Religion’, held at University of Gothenburg May 2012. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. China in ten words.