Academic literature on the topic 'Chen tianhua'

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Journal articles on the topic "Chen tianhua"

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Poelzl, Petra. "The hypercultural universe of Chen Tianzhuo." Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art 6, no. 1 (March 1, 2019): 55–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jcca.6.1.55_1.

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CHEN, ZHI-TENG. "Holomorphology and Neotype designation of Microperla geei Chu, with egg morphology of Microperla qinlinga Chen (Plecoptera: Peltoperlidae)." Zootaxa 4780, no. 3 (May 26, 2020): 563–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4780.3.8.

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A Neotype is designated for Microperla geei Chu, 1928. This species was recently collected from Tianmu Mountain, Hangzhou City, Zhejiang Province of southeastern China. The male, female, larva, and egg of M. geei are described and illustrated. Identity of the Microperla species described by Stark & Sivec (2000) is discussed. Egg morphology of M. qinlinga Chen, 2019 is also described and compared with congeners.
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Chen, Wenguang. "The demands and challenges of exascale computing: an interview with Zuoning Chen." National Science Review 3, no. 1 (March 1, 2016): 64–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nww012.

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Abstract High-performance computing (HPC) is currently moving from the petaflops scale (1015 FLOPS) towards exascale (1018 FLOPS) computing. The leap up to exascale computing will not only be a milestone in the history of computer science, but will also bring the prospect of transformative progress in many areas, including energy, life sciences, materials chemistry and national security. Because of the vital roles played by supercomputers in science, engineering and national security, the global race to develop the first exascale supercomputer is intensifying. Since 2013, China Tianhe-2 has ranked as the fastest computer in the world. Questions now arise as to the demands and challenges to be faced in the path towards development of exascale computing capabilities, and with regard to China's prospects of continuing to have the world's leading supercomputer in the future. In an interview with NSR, Professor Zuoning Chen, senior engineer of the National Research Center of Parallel Computer Engineering and Technology and Academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, gives her insights into the most important issues in this field, including the technical challenges when designing and implementing exascale computers, fault tolerance issues, processor architectures, interconnect bandwidths, emerging technologies for the mitigation of memory problems and the challenges facing and advantages for China.
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Zhao, Weijie. "Extreme weather and climate events in China under changing climate." National Science Review 7, no. 5 (April 17, 2020): 938–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwaa069.

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Abstract In the summer of 2003, a heat wave swept Europe and caused more than 70 000 additional fatalities [J.-M. Robine et al., C. R. Biologies331 (2008)]. Global warming and climate change is no longer a prophecy to be fulfilled, as strong heat waves and typhoons, as well as severe rainfalls, are becoming more severe. Extreme weather and climate events in the world, especially over Europe and North America, are widely studied and frequently reported in the media. These events may be related to the ongoing climate change. In this NSR forum, active researchers specialized in this field gather to discuss the climate and weather changes in China. They present the current changes, identify knowledge gaps, discuss the research difficulties, and propose ways forward to better serve the society with climate science. Ying Sun Professor at the National Climate Center of the China Meteorological Administration, China Qiuhong Tang Professor at the Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Zhongwei Yan Professor at the Institute of Atmospheric Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Jing Yang Professor at the Academy of Disaster Reduction and Emergency Management, faculty of Geographic Science of Beijing Normal University, China Panmao Zhai Professor at the Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences of the China Meteorological Administration, and the current Co-Chair of the IPCC Working Group I, China Tianjun Zhou Professor at the Institute of Atmospheric Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Deliang Chen (Chair) Professor at the University of Gothenburg, NSR Editorial Board member, Sweden
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Loewe, Michael. "The Great Qing Code. Translated by William C. Jones, with assistance of Tianquan Cheng and Yongling Jiang [Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1994. xxx, 412, (Glossary) 11 and (Index) 17pp. Hardback. £60.00 net. ISBN 0–19–825794–5.]." Cambridge Law Journal 53, no. 3 (November 1994): 596–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008197300080971.

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Yamada, Akira. "Invited Discussion: A New Method of Correcting Cryptotia by Changing Mechanical Fulcrum After Constricted Cartilage Overturned by Professor Ruhong Zhang, Datao Li; Tianya Li; Qun Zhang; Zhicheng Xu; Feng Xu; Yiyuan Li; Xia Chen." Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, August 10, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00266-021-02523-w.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Chen tianhua"

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Andolfatto, Lorenzo. "Paper worlds : the chinese utopian novel at the beginning of the twentieth century, 1902-1910." Thesis, Lyon 3, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015LYO30033.

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A travers cette recherche, nous souhaitons identifier et définir le genre duroman utopique de la fin des Qing via la lecture attentive d'une sélection deromans chinois écrits entre 1902 et 1910. A partir de l'analyse de romans telsque Xin Zhongguo weilai ji de Liang Qichao (1902 ), Shizi hou de Chen Tianhua(1905), Xin shitou ji de Wu Jianren (1908) et Xin Zhongguo de Lu Shi'e(1910), nous pensons qu'un tel genre littéraire puisse être considéré à la foiscomme un produit particulier du climat de fragmentation socio-historique quicaractérise la période de la fin des Qing, et comme un prisme utile à sacompréhension. La structure de cette thèse est celle d'un itinéraire critique àtravers l’imaginaire utopique chinois moderne. Cet itinéraire est débuté par latraduction de l’histoire courte Xinnian Meng, écrite par Cai Yuanpei en 1905. Lecorps de cette recherche est divisé en cinq chapitres: dans le premier, lalégitimité de la catégorie générique de "wutuobang xiaoshuo" comme outilcritique valable est questionnee; le deuxième chapitre concerne les deuxromans inachevés de Liang Qichao et Chen Tianhua, dont l'étatd’«incomplétude» est utilisé comme métaphore pour la compréhension de laconstruction utopique; le troisième chapitre touche à la relation entre le romanutopique de la fin des Qing et ses modèles étrangers; enfin, dans les deuxderniers chapitres, les éléments critiques développés dans les sectionsprécédentes de la thèse sont appliqués à la lecture attentive de Xin shitou ji deWu Jianren et de Xin Zhongguo de Lu Shi'e, deux des romans les plusintéressants écrits durant cette période
With this research it is our intention to identify and define the genre of the lateQing utopian novel from the close reading of a selection of Chinese novelswritten between 1902 and 1910. With the analysis of novels such as LiangQichao's Xin Zhongguo weilai ji (1902), Chen Tianhua's Shizi hou (1905), WuJianren's Xin shitou ji (1908) and Lu Shi'e's Xin Zhongguo (1910), we believethat such a literary genre can be considered both as a peculiar product of theclimate of socio-historical fragmentation that characterises the late Qingperiod, and as a useful lens for its understanding. The structure of this thesis isthat of a critical itinerary within the Chinese modern utopian imaginary. Thisitinerary is introduced by the translation of the short story Xinnian meng,written by Cai Yuanpei in 1905. The body of this research is divided into fivechapters: in the first one, the legitimacy of the generic category of “wutuobangxiaoshuo” as a viable critical tool is put under question; the second chapterconcerns the two unfinished novels by Liang Qichao and Chen Tianhua, whosecondition of “incompleteness” is adopted as metaphor for the understanding ofthe utopian construct; the third chapter concerns the relation between the lateQing utopian novel and its foreign models; while in the last two chapters, thecritical framework developed in previous sections of the thesis is applied to theclose reading of Wu Jianren's Xin shitou ji and Lu Shi'e's Xin Zhongguo, two ofthe most interesting novels written in this period
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Chen, Tianyu [Verfasser]. "The geochemical cycling and paleoceanographic application of combined oceanic Nd-Hf isotopes / Tianyu Chen." Kiel : Universitätsbibliothek Kiel, 2013. http://d-nb.info/1044891807/34.

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Books on the topic "Chen tianhua"

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Qingbo, Liu, and Peng Guoxing, eds. Chen Tianhua ji. Changsha Shi: Hu'nan ren min chu ban she, 2008.

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Qingbo, Liu, and Peng Guoxing, eds. Chen Tianhua ji. Changsha Shi: Hu'nan ren min chu ban she, 2008.

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Chengkang, Fei, ed. Zou Rong he Chen Tianhua. Shanghai: Shanghai ren min chu ban she, 1985.

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Zhi, Zhi, Chen Tianhua 1875-1905, and Zou Rong 1885-1905, eds. Meng hui tou: Chen Tianhua, Zou Rong ji. Shenyang: Liaoning ren min chu ban she, 1994.

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author, Chen Tianhua 1875-1905, Zou Rong 1885-1905 author, Yan Changhong editor, and He Guang editor, eds. Zhongguo jin dai si xiang jia wen ku: Yang Yulin, Chen Tianhua, Zou Rong juan. Beijing: Zhongguo ren min da xue chu ban she, 2014.

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Yin yue zhi zi: Chen Tianhe da shi zhuan. Beijing: Dong fang chu ban she, 1993.

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Chen, Qingfeng. Kong xin ling yu: Chen Qingfeng Chen Tianna fu nü Zhong xi hua lian zhan = East meets West : Ching Fun Chan x Tina Chan, the two-generations joint exhibition. Xianggang: Chu ban gong fang, 2016.

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Zhongguo ren min zheng zhi xie shang hui yi. Tianshui Shi wei yuan hui. Wen shi zi liao wei yuan hui, ed. Tianshui Shi fei wu zhi wen hua yi chan ming lu tu dian. Lanzhou Shi: Gansu wen hua chu ban she, 2013.

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Zhongguo wen hua shi tan jiu ji: Feng Tianyu xian sheng qi shi shou chen xue shu yan tao hui wen ji. Beijing: Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she, 2011.

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Chaoxian Che Tianlu Han shi yan jiu: A study on the Chinese poetry of Korean poet Cha Cheon-ro. Jinan Shi: Shandong ren min chu ban she, 2014.

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Book chapters on the topic "Chen tianhua"

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Lo, Dennis. "Hou Xiaoxian as Ambassador." In The Authorship of Place, 121–44. Hong Kong University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888528516.003.0006.

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This chapter closely traces the evolution of Hou Xiaoxian's contentious modes of place making while he shot on-location in China for the “Taiwan Trilogy," where Southern Chinese locales sometimes substituted for Taiwan’s historical settings. Location shooting in China for City of Sadness presented Hou with his first opportunity to perform a role as a cultural ambassador in an unprecedented period of cross-strait geopolitical thaw. After cross-strait relations became more normalized, Hou widely publicized his intentions of location shooting in Fujian for The Puppetmaster (1993). During this shoot, Hou articulated his theory of “authenticating life,” or the reenactment of lived experience. To authenticate the life of famed Taiwanese puppeteer Li Tianlu, whom he believed to be a living embodiment of Chinese-ness, Hou re-staged live budaixi shows in Fujian, hoping the environmental aura of present-day China would conjure for Li memories of colonial-era Taiwan. Assistant director Chen Huaien, however, counters that it was Taiwanese culture which required salvaging, not China’s. “Authenticating life,” Chen implied, relied on inauthentic means of reenactment to produce what only felt superficially authentic. The final section explores this contradiction as it is manifested in Good Men, Good Women (1995) – Hou’s first, and final film to feature present-day Chinese settings. I demonstrate that the filmmakers were unable to experience their production environments in Guangdong as anything more than through a “tourist gaze.” Hou finally experienced the constraints of “authenticating life,” and more broadly, the complexities of salvaging cultural Chinese heritage in an increasingly volatile period of cross-strait relations.
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Johnson, Elizabeth Lominska, and Graham E. Johnson. "The Early Years of the Yau, Chan, and Fan Lineages in Tsuen Wan." In A Chinese Melting Pot, 43–71. Hong Kong University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888455898.003.0003.

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Tsuen Wan’s history as a Hakka district dates to the 18th century, after the lifting of the coastal expulsion order in the early Qing dynasty. It was poor and rugged, with some reclamation on the coast, and was famous for its pineapples, which could be taken by boat to Hong Kong Island. A daily coastal market developed, and connections to urban Hong Kong grew as industry developed. The district was self-governing through a body attached to the central Tianhou temple, and relatively peaceful, with many small lineages. Wealthier families often hired long-term workers to help with farming and business, but women were also known for their hard work in agriculture, and kin relationships through women helped in creating a tight-knit society. There also were strong bonds among women, expressed through their laments and mountain songs.
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