13,050 research outputs found
Margaret J. Pearson, Wang Fu and the Comments of a Recluse : a study with translations, 1989
Cheng Anne. Margaret J. Pearson, Wang Fu and the Comments of a Recluse : a study with translations, 1989. In: Études chinoises, vol. 10, n°1-2, Printemps-Automne 1991. pp. 225-228
Margaret J. Pearson, Wang Fu and the Comments of a Recluse : a study with translations, 1989
Cheng Anne. Margaret J. Pearson, Wang Fu and the Comments of a Recluse : a study with translations, 1989. In: Études chinoises, vol. 10, n°1-2, Printemps-Automne 1991. pp. 225-228
Wang Cheng-li, Bohai Jianshi, Li Dian-fu & Sun Yu-liang, Bohai guo Yang Bao-long, Bohai-shi rumen
Yonglip Joo. Wang Cheng-li, Bohai Jianshi, Li Dian-fu & Sun Yu-liang, Bohai guo Yang Bao-long, Bohai-shi rumen. In: Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie, vol. 6, 1991. Numéro spécial Chamanisme coréen - Special Issue on Korean Shamanism. pp. 311-313
One new species and one new combination of the genus Neocyrtopsis Liu & Zhang, 2007 (Orthoptera: Meconematinae) from Emeishan, China
Wang, Hai-Jian, Cao, Cheng-Quan, Shi, Fu-Ming (2013): One new species and one new combination of the genus Neocyrtopsis Liu & Zhang, 2007 (Orthoptera: Meconematinae) from Emeishan, China. Zootaxa 3681 (2): 182-186, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3681.2.
Wang Shuo and the commercialisation of contemporary Chinese culture
This thesis examines the commercialisation of Chinese culture that has taken place over the past twenty years in mainland China. It explores the contribution of Wang Shuo, a cultural figure who straddles different fields of culture, moving from literature to the ultimate mass culture medium of television, this study plots Wang Shuo' s development from educational failure, to business failure, to fiction writer, film & TV editor, film director and cultural critic and analyst. His stories, films, TV series and articles have caused shock-waves throughout national cultural circles as he has transformed the terms of the debate from academic discourse to a validation of the role of the market in the culture field. Although Wang Shuo has not been labelled as a dissident, his approach to the culture market has had a more subversive effect on official ideology that those overt dissidents who have had to live in exile or have been imprisoned. He has utilised the language of official ideology to satirise the authorities, turning the ideology and its supporters into figures of fun. Yet his own goals have been strictly personal and economic ones. The authorities recognize the value of Wang Shuo's work in the cultural market but at the same time distrust his works and place him under strict censorship. Examining the way Wang Shuo and people surround him have succeeded in different fields of cultural achievement is a mirror to understanding the process of the transformation of contemporary Chinese culture from a socialist state-controlled culture to a market-oriented mass culture industry
Reticuluma Cheng & Li 2005
Genus <i>Reticuluma</i> Cheng & Li <p> <i>Reticuluma</i> Cheng & Li, 2005: 379–383; Fu & Zhang, 2015: 253–260; Wang & Zhang, 2019: 289–295; Xu, Yu, Dai & Yang, 2020: 177–186. Type species: <i>Reticuluma citrana</i> Cheng & Li, 2005.</p> <p> <b>Redescription:</b> Body flat, sloped anterad from the middle of pronotum. Covered with black or brown reticulation. Crown slightly narrower than pronotum; coronal suture length about 3/5 of crown; ocelli located on crown, closer to eyes than to each other. Postclypeus slightly convex, anteclypeus flat and truncate at apex. Pronotum length 1.5 times medial length of crown, anterior margin convex, posterior margin transverse. Scutellum basal width longer than medial length. Forewing elongate, with many false veins consisting of dark pigment lines; crossvein present between claval veins, some species with short setae on subcostal vein; appendix developed.</p> <p>Pygophore longer than high, posterior margin rounded with a short apical process. Valve triangular. Subgenital plate extending beyond apex of pygofer, nearly triangular. Connective ‘Y’ shaped; stem slightly longer than anterior arms. Style with developed preapical lobe, apical fingerlike, curved laterally; preapical lobe with several setae near inner margin. Aedeagal shaft with pair of preapical processes.</p> <p> <b>Remarks.</b> Examination of specimens of species previously included in <i>Reticuluma</i> Cheng & Li revealed that this genus, as previously defined, is very similar to <i>Chanohirata</i> in overall body size, structure, coloration and male genitalia. However, the male pygofer of the type species of <i>Reticuluma</i> differs from other species included in the genus in having an obvious process on the lateroapical margin. Hence, we restrict the definition of <i>Reticuluma</i> to include only the type species and transfer all other species previously included in <i>Reticuluma</i> to <i>Chanohirata</i>: <i>C. bipennata</i> (Xu, Yu, Dai & Yang) <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>C. dactyla</i> (Fu & Zhang) <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>C. eurya</i> (Fu & Zhang) <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>C. hamata</i> (Wang & Zhang) <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>C. lini</i> (Cheng & Li) <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>C. lageniformia</i> (Wang & Zhang) <b>comb. nov.</b> and <i>C. spinata</i> (Cheng & Li) <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>Reticuluma testacea</i> (Kuoh, 1991) <b>syn. nov.</b> of <i>C. theae</i> (Matsumura, 1912).</p>Published as part of <i>Wang, Dongming & Zhang, Yalin, 2022, Three new species in the genus Chanohirata (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae: Deltocephalinae: Penthimiini) from China, pp. 432-441 in Zootaxa 5129 (3)</i> on page 433, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5129.3.7, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/6501286">http://zenodo.org/record/6501286</a>
Some Problems Concerning the Yan-wang Fu 燕王府 in the Early Ming
In the third year of the reign of Hong-wu 洪武 (1370), the founder of the Ming dynasty, his fourth son, Zhu Ti 朱棣 (the future emperor Yongle 永楽), was enfeoffed as Prince Yan 燕王. Thereafter, in the thirteenth year of the same reign, he proceeded to the Yan-wang fu, the prince's headquaters, established in Bei ping cheng 北平城 (the present-day Beijing) to assume his fief. As regards the location of the Yan-wang fu, it has heretofore been understood, on the basis of the research of those such as Zhu Xie 朱契, as having been situated in the so-called Western Garden 西苑, within the Forbidden City 紫禁城 on the west side of the Tai-ye chi 太液池. In contrast, Wang Pu-zi 王璞子and Wang Jian-ying 王劍英 have produced a new theory in recent years claiming that the Yan-wang fu was located within the Yuan greater palace grounds 大内宮城 on the eastern side of the Tai-ye chi. The two positions have been disputed ever since. In this article I consider the location of the Yan-wang fu first on the basis of the historical records contained in the Ming tai-zu shi-lu 明太祖實錄 and the relevant accounts recorded by diplomatic missions from Koryo 高麗. Based on these records I have been able to confirm that the Yan-wang fu was situated within the walls 蕭牆 of the Yuan imperial palace, and that the Wang fu gong cheng 王府宮城 was situated on the eastern side of the Tai-ye chi within the greater palace grounds. I next considered the relationship between the process of construction of the Yan-wang fu and the bestowal to Zhu Ti of the Bei ping territory. According to my findings, the especially generous treatment of Prince Yan Zhu Ti in terms of bestowal of land by the emperor Hong-wu as described in the third edition of the Tai-zu shi-lu 太祖實錄, which was revised in the Yong le period, cannot be recognized as historically accurate. I have also made clear that the three princes, Qin-wang 秦王, Jin-wang 晉王, and Yan-wang 燕王, were each given nearly identical treatment in terms of allotment of lands and their enfeoffments. I hypothesize that the fact that the Yuan palace was used for the Yan-wang fu was because of a fiscal decision to use utmost restraint in holding public works construction to a minimum, and resulted in the dual construction of a revamped palace 王城 created out of Yuan greater palace grounds on the eastern side of the Tai-ye chi and the use of the walls of the Yuan imperial palace as the outer wall without the construction of a moat
Review of the genus Lemaireia Nässig & Holloway, 1988 from China, with description of a new species (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae)
Jiang, Zhuo-Heng, Wang, Cheng-Bin, Miu, Ben-Fu, Guo, Liang (2021): Review of the genus Lemaireia Nässig & Holloway, 1988 from China, with description of a new species (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae). Zootaxa 5027 (3): 429-437, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5027.3.
sj-docx-1-asn-10.1177_17590914231169140 - Supplemental material for Activation of the PACAP/PAC1 Signaling Pathway Accelerates the Repair of Impaired Spatial Memory Caused by an Ultradian Light Cycle
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-asn-10.1177_17590914231169140 for Activation of the PACAP/PAC1 Signaling Pathway Accelerates the Repair of Impaired Spatial Memory Caused by an Ultradian Light Cycle by Dejiao Xu, Ying Zhang, Jun Feng, Hongyu Fu, Jiayi Li, Wei Wang, Zhen Li, Pingping Zhang, Xinqi Cheng, Liecheng Wang and Juan Cheng in ASN Neuro</p
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