Results for 'beauty in Communist China'

971 found
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  1. Female Bodily Aesthetics, Politics, and Feminine Ideals of Beauty in China.Eva Kit Wah Man - 2000 - In Peg Zeglin Brand (ed.), Beauty Matters. Indiana University Press. pp. 169-196.
    A long and scholarly piece by Eva Kitt WahMan covers the history of Chinese conventionsgoverning female “beauty” from Confuciusthrough Maoism to the present day. Classicalmanuals provide highly specific requirements forcourtesans and concubines. The shrunken, pulpyappendages produced by foot-binding practiceswere regarded as the most sexually stimulatingfeatures of the female body. In 1949, following theinauguration of the Communist regime, womenwere expected to shun ornament and make-up, tohave short hair, wear party uniforms, and to lookas much like men as possible. The (...)
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  2.  29
    Education in Communist China.R. F. Price - 1970 - British Journal of Educational Studies 18 (3):323-324.
  3.  45
    “Collective Monitoring, Collective Defense”: Science, Earthquakes, and Politics in Communist China.Fa-ti Fan - 2012 - Science in Context 25 (1):127-154.
    ArgumentThis paper examines the earthquake monitoring and prediction program, called “collective monitoring, collective defense,” in communist China during the Cultural Revolution, a period of political upheavals and natural disasters. Guided by their scientific and political ideas, the Chinese developed approaches to earthquake monitoring and prediction that emphasized mass participation, everyday knowledge, and observations of macro-seismic phenomena. The paper explains the ideas, practices, and epistemology of the program within the political context of the Cultural Revolution. It also suggests possibilities (...)
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  4.  24
    (5 other versions)Communications and National Integration in Communist China.Alvin P. Cohen & Alan P. L. Liu - 1976 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 96 (3):457.
  5.  27
    (1 other version)Communist China's Evaluation of Confucius and its Political aims in the All-Out Campaign to "Criticize Confucius" [I].Hsüan Mo - 1974 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 5 (3):4-34.
    Recently Communist China has launched an all-out campaign to criticize Confucius. It has taken a thoroughly negative and nihilistic attitude in a vigorous attempt to vilify Confucius and his thought.
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  6.  30
    Literary Dissent in Communist China.Jaroslav Prušek, M. Goldman & Jaroslav Prusek - 1968 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 88 (3):613.
  7.  16
    Religious Policy and Practice in Communist China-A Documentary History.Robert P. Gardella & Donald E. MacInnis - 1973 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (3):414.
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  8.  39
    The Construction Industry in Communist China.E. H. S. & Kang Chao - 1968 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 88 (2):366.
  9.  21
    Economic Trends in Communist China.Lawrence J. Lau, Alexander Eckstein, Walter Galenson & Ta-Chung Liu - 1969 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 89 (3):654.
  10.  25
    Market Control and Planning in Communist China.E. H. S. & Dwight H. Perkins - 1966 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 86 (2):262.
  11.  66
    Chinese philosophy in communist china.Wing-Tsit Chan - 1961 - Philosophy East and West 11 (3):115-123.
  12.  18
    Agricultual Production in Communist China, 1949-1965.Nai-Ruenn Chen & Kang Chao - 1973 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (2):222.
  13.  25
    The City in Communist China.Y. J. Chih & John Wilson Lewis - 1972 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 92 (4):584.
  14.  12
    Inheriting Tradition: Interpretations of the Classical Philosophers in Communist China, 1949-1966.Kam Louie - 1986 - New York: Oxford University Press USA.
    The prominent philosopher Feng Youlan in the late 1950s devised an 'abstract inheritance method' with which he sought to salvage traditional thought. The debates over this method and what it entailed lasted until the Cultural Revolution. This book is an examination of those debates, and therepercussions arising from them in the discussions on classical Chinese philosophy.
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  15.  20
    Is Communist China a New Type of Civilization? The Civilizational Argument in Contemporary Chinese Ideology.Alexander Lukin - 2024 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2024 (207):7-37.
    ExcerptEvery new Chinese leader considers it his duty to make his contribution to state administration theory, which, while formally considered to be Marxist, is moving ever further away from the classical doctrines of Marx and Engels and from their Soviet, Leninist-Stalinist version. Chinese party theoreticians explain that it is the changing situation and specific nature of Chinese society, and not just the ambitions of the country’s leaders, that create the need for new theories. It is no coincidence that a whole (...)
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  16.  23
    Can animals predict earthquakes?: Bio-sentinels as seismic sensors in communist China and beyond.Fa-ti Fan - 2018 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 70:58-69.
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  17.  23
    The Smell of Inner Beauty in Ancient China.Casey Schoenberger - 2022 - Substance 51 (3):132-150.
    Abstract:Qu Yuan (c. 340–278 BC) is often called “the first Chinese poet,” because the primary work attributed to him, Li sao (“Sublimating Sorrow”), is the first in the tradition to evoke a distinctive persona engaged in self-reflection and personal narrative. To explain why this story of frustrated political ambition became arguably the first instance of Chinese autobiography or life writing, this paper uses the notion of “biological handicap,” proposed by Amotz Zahavi. As a peacock’s cumbersome tail feathers reduce its individual (...)
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  18.  28
    Experiments in Communism: Poland, the Soviet Union, and China. Part 2: The Soviet Experience under Lenin.Peter S. H. Tang - 1985 - Studies in Soviet Thought 29 (3):201-242.
  19.  1
    The Criticism of Hu Shihʼs Thought in Communist China.Zhan Lian - 1965
  20.  52
    (4 other versions)Experiments in communism: Poland, the soviet union, and china.Peter S. H. Tang - 1983 - Studies in East European Thought 26 (4):287-370.
  21.  12
    Technology diplomacy in early Communist China: the visit to the Jingjiang Flood Diversion Project in 1952.Yue Liang - 2024 - British Journal for the History of Science 57 (2):191-203.
    This article focuses on the 1952 visit to the Jingjiang Flood Diversion Project, the first large-scale water infrastructure built on the Yangzi river after the founding of the People's Republic of China, by a foreign delegation from the Asia-Pacific Peace Conference. Serving as a form of technology diplomacy, this trip advanced two main purposes for the newly established country – to build up closer ties with ‘foreign friends’ who advocated international peace in the context of the Korean War, and (...)
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  22.  16
    Industrial Development in Pre-Communist China: A Quantitative Analysis.Fred C. Hung & John K. Chang - 1971 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 91 (1):151.
  23.  42
    Communism, Confucianism, and charisma: the political in modern China.Rana Mitter - 2013 - In Michael Freeden & Andrew Vincent (eds.), Comparative political thought: theorizing practices. New York: Routledge. pp. 60.
  24.  9
    Recovering Buddhism in Modern China.Jan Kiely & J. Brooks Jessup (eds.) - 2016 - Cambridge University Press.
    Modern Chinese history told from a Buddhist perspective restores the vibrant, creative role of religion in postimperial China. It shows how urban Buddhist elites jockeyed for cultural dominance in the early Republican era, how Buddhist intellectuals reckoned with science, and how Buddhist media contributed to modern print cultures. It recognizes the political importance of sacred Buddhist relics and the complex processes through which Buddhists participated in and experienced religious suppression under Communist rule. Today, urban and rural communities alike (...)
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  25. Female Bodily Aesthetics, Politics, and Feminine Ideals of Beauty in China.Eva Kit Wah Man - 2000 - In Peg Zeglin Brand (ed.), Beauty Matters. Indiana University Press. pp. 169-196.
     
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  26.  22
    Beauty and the State: Female Bodies as State Apparatus and Recent Beauty Discourses in China.Eva Kit Wah Man - 2013 - In Peg Brand Weiser (ed.), Beauty Unlimited. Indiana University Press. pp. 368-384.
    The global economy has an impact on female beauty today, regardless of the multicultural and historical factors in its formation and construction, resulting in monolithic crazes in women's fashion and appearance. but female beauty in china has been greatly contested with China's turbulent modern history, and this contestation deserves serious consideration, together with the politics by which the Chinese state apparatus has promoted and regulated female beauty. I argue that certain factors have been constant in (...)
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  27.  15
    The Dean of Shandong: Confessions of a Minor Bureaucrat at a Chinese University by Daniel Bell (review).Shuchen Xiang - 2023 - Philosophy East and West 73 (4):1-5.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Dean of Shandong: Confessions of a Minor Bureaucrat at a Chinese University by Daniel BellShuchen Xiang (bio)The Dean of Shandong: Confessions of a Minor Bureaucrat at a Chinese University. By Daniel Bell. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2023. Pp. x+ 196. Hardcover $27.95, isbn ISBN 978-0-691-24712-0.In the Dean of Shandong: Confessions of a Minor Bureaucrat at a Chinese University, Daniel Bell reflects on his experiences of Chinese academia, (...)
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  28.  7
    From comrades to bodhisattvas: moral dimensions of lay Buddhist practice in contemporary China.Gareth Fisher - 2014 - Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press.
    From Comrades to Bodhisattvas is the first book-length study of Han Chinese Buddhism in post-Mao China. Using an ethnographic approach supported by over a decade of field research, it provides an intimate portrait of lay Buddhist practitioners in Beijing who have recently embraced a religion that they were once socialized to see as harmful superstition. The book focuses on the lively discourses and debates that take place among these new practitioners in an unused courtyard of a Beijing temple. In (...)
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  29.  40
    Prospects for the Study of the History of Chinese Philosophy: Also on the Issue of the True, the Good, and the Beautiful in China's Traditional Philosophy.Tang Yijie - 1983 - Chinese Studies in Philosophy 15 (2):9.
    Confronting us now is the problem of prospects for the study of Chinese philosophy, that is, the problem of how to evaluate the traditional philosophy of China.
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  30. The boundaries of beauty in pre-Qin confucian aesthetics.Qian Zhang - 2009 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 4 (1):52-63.
    Beauty” is a very important concept in Pre-Qin Confucian aesthetics. Pre-Qin Confucian aesthetics generally had two viewpoints when defining beauty: Negatively, by stressing that “beauty” in the aesthetic sense was not “good”; and positively, by stressing two factors: one, that beauty was related to “feeling” which was not an animal instinct, the other was that “beauty” was a special texture with a particular meaning. “Beauty” in Pre-Qin Confucian aesthetics may be defined as “texture (or (...)
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  31.  29
    The Scourge of Prostitution in Contemporary China: The “Bao Ernai” Phenomenon.Barbara Onnis - 2012 - Asian Culture and History 4 (2):p91.
    China in the post-Mao era was transformed by a veritable economic miracle and simultaneously underwent a series of radical époque-making changes in the Chinese ruling classes’ political and ideological approach to government. The continued rapid growth and the expansion of a consumer society have also contributed to the discrediting of those traditional values which for many years underpinned and fortified the force of communism. In addition to the demise of traditional values, the waning belief in Maoist ideology and the (...)
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  32.  47
    Missing Links in The China Model.Chenyang Li - 2019 - Philosophy East and West 69 (2):568-576.
    Daniel A. Bell's recent book The China Model: Political Meritocracy and the Limits of Democracy makes a significant contribution to political theory, political philosophy, and China studies. The book has already drawn a variety of responses, some of which I believe are due to utter misreadings and misunderstandings. It is therefore important for us to spell out explicitly what kind of work we are dealing with here before we dive into other substantive issues. We should not take this (...)
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  33.  40
    Politics of love: Love as a religious and political discourse in modern China through the lens of political leaders.Ting Guo - 2020 - Critical Research on Religion 8 (1):39-52.
    As part of a larger project, this paper serves as an overview that examines how “ai” 愛 as an affective concept made its way into the Chinese vocabulary, how it gained popularity at specific junctures in modern Chinese history, and the ways in which it has been adapted as a marker of modernity and a political discourse in Republican and Communist China in distinct ways. Although literary scholars have noted the significance of the shaping of love as an (...)
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  34.  30
    (1 other version)Crafting socialist embryology: dialectics, aquaculture and the diverging discipline in Maoist China, 1950–1965.Lijing Jiang - 2017 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 40 (1):3.
    In the 1950s, embryology in socialist China underwent a series of changes that adjusted the disciplinary apparatus to suit socialism and the national goal of self-reliance. As the Communist state called on scientists to learn from the Soviets, embryologists’ comprehensive view on heredity, which did not contradict Trofim Lysenko ’s doctrines, provided a space for them to advance their discipline. Leading scientists, often trained abroad in the tradition of experimental embryology, rode on the tides of Maoist ideology and (...)
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  35.  16
    The spirit of selflessness in Maoist China: socialist medicine and the new man.Christos Lynteris - 2012 - Basingstoke: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    The book narrates how, called to embody this selfless spirit, medical doctors were trapped in a spiral between cultivation and abolition, leading to the explosion of ideology during the Cultural Revolution.
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  36.  23
    Textological studies and a new understanding of Marx’s thought in contemporary China.Jinfang Nie - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (11):1778-1785.
    Textology has gradually become an important field and special research area in the overall pattern of Chinese Marxism since the beginning of the 21st century. Scholars have honed new explanations with new understandings concerning the relations between the origins of Marx’s thought and the Western cultural tradition, the continuity and essence of Marx’s thought through change, the complexity of Marx’s theory of capital and the arduousness of the criticisms against it, and the concrete contents of communism. Reflecting on the various (...)
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  37. On some issues of communist morality+ in china today.Ff Li - 1981 - Chinese Studies in Philosophy 13 (1):22-36.
     
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  38.  60
    John Dewey and the rise of Marxism in China: How John Dewey inspired the educational ideas of the Chinese Communist Party.Xing Liu - 2024 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 56 (6):605-615.
    Dewey’s philosophy of education was heavily criticized by the Chinese Communist Party in the 1950s, which led many to believe that Dewey’s education was in complete opposition to that of the CCP. However, this study intends to prove that Dewey had a tremendous influence on the early CCP members of the 1920s. Dewey’s Chinese visit closely coincided highly with the time of the reception of Marxism in China and the eventual establishment of the CCP. Both founders of the (...)
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  39.  18
    MODERNISATION FEATURES OF SOCIALISM WITH CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS DOCTRINE IN THE NEW ERA (following the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China).Sergii Rudenko & Liudmyla Yevdokymova - forthcoming - Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv Philosophy.
    This article presents an analytical overview of the critical modernisation features of Socialism with Chinese characteristics doctrine in the new era, which was proposed at the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China. The authors reconstructed and systematically represented the central philosophical and political principles of the doctrine of Socialism with Chinese characteristics in the context of the fundamental principles of Chinese Marxism. The authors also analysed and presented in a systematic form the essence and basic (...)
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  40.  31
    From ‘Awe-Inspiringly Beautiful’ to ‘Patterns in Conventionalized Behavior’: The Historical Development of the Metacultural Concept of Wén in Pre-Qín China.Uffe Bergeton - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 139 (2):433.
    Earlier studies of the term wén 文 in pre-Qín texts do not fully explain the relation-ship between its basic meaning ‘ pattern’ and its more abstract meanings ‘moral refinement’ and ‘tradition of conventionalized behavior’. In contrast, I argue that, when used as an epithet describing individuals in pre-Zhànguó texts, wén meant something like ‘awe-inspiringly beautiful’, rather than ‘accomplished’ or ‘cultured’ as proposed in earlier studies and translations. Wearing clothes embroidered with ‘rank indicating emblems’ and possessing ‘decorated’ accoutrements signaling authority were (...)
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  41.  8
    Talks In China.Rabindranath Tagore & Sisir Kumar Das - 2002 - Books Catalog.
    China visit was the most tempestuous of all his foreign trips. He met with organised hostility from the members of the Communist Party and was labelled as a reactionary and ideologically dangerous.
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  42.  28
    (1 other version)The Study of Mao Zedong Thought in Contemporary China.Su Shaozhi - 1992 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 23 (3):57-68.
    Since its founding, the Chinese Communist Party has consistently employed as a guide for all its work the integration of the general principles of Marxism with the concrete realities of the Chinese revolution. To achieve this, however, is by no means an easy task. It was not until the Seventh Congress of the CCP held in 1945 that this guiding principle of "integration" was accepted by the whole Party and put into practice. From that time, China's New Democratic (...)
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  43.  27
    The Experience of L’Internationale in Modern China.Yiwei Song - 2018 - Cultura 15 (2):157-172.
    During the 20th-century Chinese revolution, L’Internationale was one of the most important political symbols. After the failure of the Paris Commune in 1871, Eugène Pottier wrote the poem titled “L’Internationale” which was published for the first time until 1887. It was set to music by Pierre Degeyter in 1888 and introduced into China from both France and the Soviet Union. Qu Qiubai and Xiao San made great contribution to the work of translation that influenced the official version in 1962. (...)
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  44.  14
    China in a Secular Age: Coping with the Legacy of a Religious State.André Laliberté - 2021 - BRILL.
    André Laliberté examines the long tradition of statecraft in China to demonstrate how the intermingling of religions and state remains a key feature of Chinese modernity despite the materialist philosophy of the Communist Party.
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  45.  8
    Pavlovianism in China: Politics and differentiation across scientific disciplines in the Maoist era.Zhipeng Gao - 2015 - History of Science 53 (1):57-85.
    In the early 1950s, the Chinese communist party promoted a massive Learning-from-the-Soviet-Union Campaign and made Pavlov’s reflexology the political-academic orthodoxy in physiology, medical science and psychology. In the late 1950s, however, while Pavlov’s theory was continuously advocated by physiologists and medical scientists, it suffered a major setback in psychology as Pavlovian psychology was criticized as being bourgeois and reactionary. How was it possible for such sheer contrast across disciplines to take place within a few years? This paper argues that (...)
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  46.  46
    What Is the Aesthetics in China?Gu Feng & Dai Wenjing - 2017 - Aisthesis: Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 10 (2):125-134.
    It could be said that chinese aesthetics merges together three cornerstones of the western tradition. It might be intended as the study of beauty in the Platonic sense, because of the vaste debate on the topic rooted back in chinese’s ancient times; it could match the sense of aesthetics as intended by Baumgarten, because of the long tradition of chinese perceptual studies, and it may also be compared to the Hegelian philosophy of art, given the abundance of chinese artistic (...)
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  47.  12
    Beauty without Borders: A Meiji Anthology of Classical Chinese Poetry on Beautiful Women and Sino-Japanese Literati Interactions in the Seventeenth to Twentieth Centuries.Xiaojing Li - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 136 (2):371.
    In this paper I investigate a reprint of a Meiji anthology titled Meiren qiantai shi 美人千態詩 by Shang- hai shuju in 1914. This is the first time that this anthology has received critical attention. I examine the poems collected by the anthologist, contextualize the anthology in relation to traditions and trends in Japan and China, and analyze the significance of the poetic tradition centered on images of women for understanding border-crossing literati culture from the seventeenth to the early twentieth (...)
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  48.  24
    Marxism and confucianism in ideology of communist party of china.Zbigniew Wiktor - 2019 - Nowa Krytyka 42:109-188.
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  49.  13
    Philosophy and the Idea of Communism: Alain Badiou in Conversation with Peter Engelmann.Susan Spitzer (ed.) - 2015 - Malden, MA: Polity.
    In a well-known text called ‘The Communist Hypothesis’, first published in 2007, the renowned philosopher Alain Badiou breathed fresh life into the idea of communism as an intellectual representation that provides a critical perspective on existing politics and offers a systemic alternative to capitalism. Now, in the course of this wide-ranging conversation with Peter Engelmann, Alain Badiou explains why he continues to value the idea of communism against the background of current social crises and despite negative historical experiences. From (...)
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  50. China's Economic Revolution.Alexander Eckstein - 1977 - Cambridge University Press.
    Professor Eckstein's book is a study of China's efforts to achieve rapid modernization of its economy within a socialist framework. Eckstein begins with an examination of economic development in pre-Communist China, specifically focusing on the resources and liabilities inherited by the new regime in 1949 and their effects on development policies. He then analyses the economic objectives of the Communist leadership - narrowing income disparities, maintaining full employment without inflation, and achieving rapid industrialization - and argues (...)
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