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World Affairs Online
In: Springer eBook Collection
Chapter 1: Introduction of Study -- Chapter 2: Background of Chinese Outward FDI and Chinese MNEs in African Countries -- Chapter 3: Literature Review -- Chapter 4: Methodology and Data -- Chapter 5: Conceptualising Infrastructure Multinationals' Provision: Case of Chinese IMNEs in Africa -- Chapter 6: The Determinants and Motivations of Chinese Telecommunication MNEs in Africa: Effects of Host Countries Economic Environment on IMNEs' Location Choice -- Chapter 7: Internationalisation and Development: Case Analysis of Chinese IMNEs in Mozambique and South Africa -- Chapter 8: Conclusion.
In: Understanding China Ser.
Intro -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Part One: Review and Introspection on the Research of Li Ji -- Thorough Understanding of the Idea of Rite through Li Ji -- Review on the Research of Li Ji -- Vision and Introspection on Trends of Research on Li Ji -- Part Two: Mythology and Ritual: New Perspective on the Source of Rituals -- Part Three: Ritual Narrative and Mythology Coding: Research Ideas of This Book -- Part Four: The "Quadruple Evidence Method" in Anthropology: Research Methodology of This Book -- Contents -- 1 "Rebirth" Mythology: The Source of the Symbolic Significance of the Capping Ritual -- 1.1 "Rebirth" and the Spring Rite: Investigation into Timing of the Capping Ritual -- 1.1.1 "Rebirth" Mythology: Springtime Celebration Ceremonies and Repayment of Debt of Gratitude -- 1.1.2 Resurrection After Death: Spring Celebration Ceremonies and Coming-of-Age Ceremonies -- 1.1.3 Abandonment of Youth and Formation of Virtue: Spring Sacrificial Rite for the Earth and Capping Ritual -- 1.2 Symbolism of "Rebirth": The Archetype of the "Cap" -- 1.2.1 Guan, Mian, Jue, Bian: Characters in the "Guan" Family Seen on Oracle Inscriptions and Bronze Vessel Inscriptions and Explorations of Their Meanings -- 1.2.2 Duke and Emperor: Headdresses of the Shang and Zhou Dynasties Found Among Excavated Cultural Relics -- 1.2.3 Birth and Rebirth: Phenology of the Second Month of Spring and the Original Symbolism of the "Cap" -- 1.3 Sacred Place of "Rebirth": The East Room and the Space for Capping Ritual -- 1.3.1 North Hall, Day Lily, and Mother -- 1.3.2 The East Hall, the 4th Mansion of the Azure Loong of the East, and the Womb of Mother -- 1.4 The "Three-Step Capping" Ritual and Age Grade -- 1.4.1 "Three-Step Capping," "Four-Step Capping," and "Five-Step Capping" -- 1.4.2 Age Classification and Capping Ritual.
Introduction -- Chinas Preparation for the Peace Conference during WWI -- Preparation for the Peace Conference after the Ceasefire of WWI -- The Diplomacy during the Peace Conference -- Refusal to Sign the Peace Treaty -- After the Refusal -- Conclusion.
In: Asian political, economic and social issues
Fragmented Citizenship in a Quasi-Nation: The Case of Hong Kong / Ka-ki Chan, Department of Social Work, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong -- Writing the "Nation-Like Space" / Lucy Hamilton, School of English, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK -- An Examination Intergenerational Controversies and the Concerns of the Youths in Hong Kong under the Socio-Political Disturbances / Vincent W. P. Lee, PhD Research Assistant Professor, Department of Applied Social Sciences, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, Henry W. H. Ling Assistant Lecturer [Practice Consultant], Department of Social Work and Social Administration, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, and Johnson C. S. Cheung, DSW Senior Lecturer, Department of Social Work and Social Administration, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong -- The Future of Hong Kong English: Codification and Standardisation? / Ka Long Roy Chan, Department of English, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Sha Tin, Hong Kong.
China-Africa economic tie has experienced lasting rapid growth since the 2000s, attracting lots of discussion on its nature and effects. A key question is whether Chinese engagements provide an alternative paradigm to existing mainstream models, like Washington Consensus, for developing countries. However, theories on state-market dichotomy can hardly explain the strong momentum of bilateral cooperation. By examining a broad range of practices with solid field research, including trade, infrastructure, agriculture, manufacturing, industrial zones, labor and socio-environmental preservation, this book proposes a new angle of non-linear circular causality to understand Chinese approaches to work with Africa. Guided by the pursuit for sustainable growth rather than by specific models, Chinese actors are able to experiment diverse methods to foster structural transformation in Africa. In particular, the author carefully records mutual influences between Chinese and African stakeholders at all levels, from grassroots to policy making, to illustrate the effects of coevolving industrialization.
"Tang provides a coherent and systematic exploration (statement/exposition better?) of social evolution as a phenomenon and as a paradigm. He critically builds on existing discussions on social evolution, while drawing from a wide range of disciplines, including archaeology, evolutionary anthropology, sociology, economics, political science, the philosophy of social sciences, and evolutionary biology. Clarifying the relationship between biological evolution and social evolution, Tang lays bare the ontological and epistemological principles of the Social Evolutionary Paradigm. He also presents operational principles and tools for deploying this paradigm to understand empirical puzzles about human society. This is a vital resource for students, practitioners and philosophers of all social sciences"--
In: Global media giants
In this book, author Min Tang examines the political economy of the China-based leading global Internet giant, Tencent. Tracing the historical context and shaping forces, the book illuminates Tencent's emergence as a joint creation of the Chinese state and transnational financial capital. Tencent reveals interweaving axes of power on different levels, particularly interactions between the global digital industry and contemporary China. The expansion strategies Tencent has employed--horizontal and vertical integration, diversification and transnationalization--speak to the intrinsic trends of capitalist reproduction and the consistent features of the political economy of communications. The book also pinpoints two emerging and entangling trends-- transnationalization and financialization--as unfolding trajectories of the global political economy. Understanding Tencent's dynamics of growth helps to clarify the complex nature of China's contemporary transformation and the multifaceted characteristics of its increasingly globalized Internet industry. This short and highly topical research volume is perfect for students and scholars of of global media, political economy, and Chinese business, media and communication, and society.
Cover -- Half Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 General Nogi's Wife: Representations of Women in Narratives of Japanese Modernization -- 2 Against Metaphor: Gender, Violence, and Decolonization in Korean Nationalist Literature -- 3 Writing Erratic Desire: Sexual Politics in Contemporary Chinese Fiction -- 4 Two Murakamis and Marcel Proust: Memory as Form in Contemporary Japanese Fiction -- 5 The Fractured Cinema of North Korea: The Discourse of the Nation in Sea of Blood -- 6 New Urban Culture and the Anxiety of Everyday Life in Contemporary China -- 7 Image, Information, Commodity: A Few Speculations on Japanese Televisual Culture -- 8 Cinema and the Public Sphere: The Films of Ōshima Nagisa -- 9 Sexual DisOrientations: Homosexual Rights, East Asian Films, and Postmodern Postnationalism -- 10 Looking Backward in the Age of Global Capital: Thoughts on History in Third World Cultural Criticism -- Selected Βibliography -- About the Book -- About the Contributors -- Index.
In: Quelle drôle d'époque !
"In early modern Europe, international law emerged as a means of governing relations between rapidly consolidating sovereign states, purporting to establish a normative order for the perilous international world. However, it was intrinsically fragile and uncertain, for sovereign states had no acknowledged common authority that would create, change, apply, and enforce legal norms. In Imagining World Order, Chenxi Tang shows that international world order was as much a literary as a legal matter. To begin with, the poetic imagination contributed to the making of international law. As the discourse of international law coalesced, literary works from romances and tragedies to novels responded to its unfulfilled ambitions and inexorable failures, occasionally affirming it, often contesting it, always uncovering its problems and rehearsing imaginary solutions. Tang highlights the various modes in which literary texts--some highly canonical (Camões, Shakespeare, Corneille, Lohenstein, and Defoe, among many others), some largely forgotten yet worth rediscovering--engaged with legal thinking in the period from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. In tracing such engagements, he offers a dual history of international law and European literature. As legal history, the book approaches the development of international law in this period--its so-called classical age--in terms of literary imagination. As literary history, Tang recounts how literature confronted the question of international world order and how, in the process, a set of literary forms common to major European languages (epic, tragedy, romance, novel) evolved"--
In: Routledge studies on China in transition Volume 54
Introduction -- Prestige and privilege : three types of gated community and two groups of housing middle class -- Formation of China's housing middle class : home ownership and "the system" impact -- Privilege beyond salary : reward distribution and socioeconomic status -- Bifurcated lifestyles : consumption, social relationships and perceptions -- Middle class homeowner activism : the limits of participation in neighbourhood governance -- Conclusion the housing middle class and social stratification in urban China -- Appendix.