International cultural relations
In: Routledge library editions. International relations, Volume 7
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In: Routledge library editions. International relations, Volume 7
In: Routledge Library Editions: International Relations
World Affairs Online
In: International Journal, Band 42, Heft 3, S. 625
In: Australian foreign affairs record: AFAR, Band 46, S. 393-396
ISSN: 0311-7995
In: Australian foreign affairs record: AFAR, Band 57, S. 911-915
ISSN: 0311-7995
In: Australian foreign affairs record: AFAR, Band 57, S. 906-910
ISSN: 0311-7995
In: Far Eastern survey, Band 13, S. 88-91
ISSN: 0362-8949
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, S. 77-82
ISSN: 0002-7162
In: The China quarterly, Band 7, S. 85-100
ISSN: 1468-2648
India has been perhaps the most favoured of non-Communist countries in its cultural relations with China. Yet the curve of Sino-Indian relations has been as affected by political considerations as the relations of China to any other country. The scant eleven years of the Communist regime have been marked by sharp ups and downs. In the first period, 1949–50, relations were cool and tentative, in spite of the presence as Ambassador of Sardar K. M. Panikkar, the distinguished historian, who was very friendly to the new régime, and in spite of India's sponsorship of Communist China for membership in the United Nations. This was the period, it will be remembered, when China was taking a very aggressive attitude towards the border problems between the two countries, and when China still considered India's independence not a "true" one and the replacement of the "bourgeois nationalist leadership" as the order of the day.
In: Department of State, Publication 1369
In: Inter-American Series 17
The influence of Greece has had a strong effect on Britain's cultural heritage and vice versa. This book encompasses fifteen topics relating to the more significant cultural contacts between the two countries. All these fifteen chapters are the result of research in various archives, both in Britain and in Greece, and demonstrate some sporadic periods of the reciprocal cultural, as opposed to political, relations of the two countries.Starting with Pytheas, who was the first to circumnavigate Britain in the time of Alexander the Great and who gave a detailed report of what he saw there, followed by an account of the life and works of the Greek monk Theodore of Tarsus, later 6th Archbishop of Canterbury, who organized the Church of England, the book includes a chapter on Shakespeare's classical knowledge and his "small Latine and lesse Greeke". There is also a chapter on Milton's interest, when he was Cromwell's Latin Secretary, in liberating Greece from Ottoman rule, and a study of an ode the young Coleridge wrote in Greek.The two great philhellenes Shelley and Byron also figure here in connection with Greece and in the light of written documents, particularly in Byron's case. The book presents also a lesser-known poem on Rigas' death written by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and concludes with two articles on Clement Harris, who volunteered and died for Greece in 1897 and on Lawrence Durrell, who loved Greece and lived on three Greek Islands, Corfu, Rhodes and Cyprus.Given its variety of subject matter and its detailed discussions, this book offers an insightful contribution to a further and better understanding between the people of these two countries
In: Slavic review: interdisciplinary quarterly of Russian, Eurasian and East European studies, Band 25, Heft 1, S. 133-142
ISSN: 2325-7784
In: Far Eastern survey, Band 13, Heft 10, S. 88-91