Academic literature on the topic 'Chinese books (Traditional characters) Fiction'

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Journal articles on the topic "Chinese books (Traditional characters) Fiction"

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CHEN, Jun, and Jie HUA. "Analysis of Multimodal Metaphors in Ink and Wash Picture Books of Chinese Characters." International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation 7, no. 11 (2024): 147–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.32996/ijllt.2024.7.11.17.

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The analysis of multimodal metaphors in Ink and Wash Picture Books of Chinese Characters centers the integration of Chinese characters and picture books. It explores how this innovative format preserves and reinterprets Chinese culture through the interplay of visual art and linguistic symbols. The paper employs multimodal analysis to reveal the metaphorical representations of Chinese characters within the picture books, which serve both as visual symbols and carriers of deep cultural and semantic information. The research indicates that the design of Chinese characters in these books not only
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McCleary, Melissa A., and Michael M. Widdersheim. "The Princess and the Poor Self-Image: An Analysis of Newbery Medal Winners for Gender Bias and Female Underrepresentation Leading into the Twenty-First Century." Pennsylvania Libraries: Research & Practice 2, no. 1 (2014): 6–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/palrap.2014.55.

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This study analyzes how 12 recent (2000-2011) Newbery Medal-winning books represent gender. The study counts how many of the books’ characters represent progressive or traditional gender roles, how many male and female characters represent each character category (protagonist, antagonist, major, and minor), how many strong female characters are accepted or rejected by their peers, how many characters hold stereotypical gender beliefs about themselves or their peers, and how many works contain balanced feminist perspectives. The study finds equitable female representation, but the study also fi
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Venzo, Paul, Lara Hedberg, and Prue Francis. "Whose eggs are these? Gender in ocean-themed picture books." Journal of Science & Popular Culture 4, no. 2 (2021): 115–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jspc_00029_1.

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Ocean-themed picture books are important educational resources that promote marine science literacy. At the same time, these picture books also carry messages about gender to child readers. Through an analysis of 100 ocean-themed informational and narrative non-fiction picture books, the authors uncover various ways in which ideas about gender are communicated to child readers, whether in relation to human or animal characters or animals with human traits and qualities. The article tests the hypothesis that marine science picture books educate children about gender in traditional, normative an
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Hu, Yiran. "A Multidimensional Interpretation of A New Story of the Stone Based on Corpus Analysis." Lecture Notes in Education Psychology and Public Media 62, no. 1 (2024): None. http://dx.doi.org/10.54254/2753-7048/62/20241792.

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As a traditional science fiction novel, A New Story of the Stone blends old and new elements. This study employs quantitative descriptions to reveal that the novel's language is rich, vivid, and concise. In terms of narrative features, the novel inherits the traditional Chinese chapter-novel structure and maintains a strong focus on scene descriptions. However, it also reflects Western influences by paying attention to the portrayal of characters' psychological activities. The novel's social utility is pronounced, as it celebrates the dissemination of advanced technology, pursues the ideal soc
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Roberts, Rosemary A. "Images of Women in the Fiction of Zhang Jie and Zhang Xinxin." China Quarterly 120 (December 1989): 800–813. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741000018476.

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Zhang Xinxin and Zhang Jie are two contemporary Chinese women writers. They began to publish in the post–Cultural Revolution era, and became well–known in the early 1980s for their fictional depiction of the problems of urban intellectual women attempting to resolve conflicts between love and career, love and marriage, and ideals and reality. Although the works of both authors present a limited challenge to traditions they believe have served to oppress women, a clear generational difference is perceptible in the attitudes they each express through their characters. Zhang Jie, born in 1937 and
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Ivanova, Elizaveta A. "TRANSFORMATION OF TRADITIONAL FANTASY CHARACTERS IN JOE ABERCROMBIE’S ‘THE FIRST LAW’ TRILOGY." Вестник Пермского университета. Российская и зарубежная филология 13, no. 1 (2021): 90–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.17072/2073-6681-2021-1-90-98.

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Joe Abercrombie is a prominent contemporary British author famous for working in such a currently popular branch of fantasy as grimdark. The characteristic feature of Abercrombie’s novels is a conscious play with conventions, traditions and clichés of classical fantasy. This article is devoted to analysis of some central figures of Abercrombie’s The First Law trilogy: infamous warrior Logen Ninefingers, young nobleman Jezal dan Luthar, inquisitor Sand dan Glokta, and Bayaz, First of the Magi. The study aims to reveal, through comparison with classical models, how the mentioned characteristic f
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Zou, Qunsheng, Yinyan Wang, Zixin Shu, et al. "Topological Analysis of the Language Networks of Ancient Traditional Chinese Medicine Books." Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2020 (December 10, 2020): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8810016.

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This study aims to explore the topological regularities of the character network of ancient traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) book. We applied the 2-gram model to construct language networks from ancient TCM books. Each text of the book was separated into sentences and a TCM book was generated as a directed network, in which nodes represent Chinese characters and links represent the sequential associations between Chinese characters in the sentences (the occurrence of identical sequential associations is considered as the weight of this link). We first calculated node degrees, average path le
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Yang, Liuxiuzi. "A Study of Novel Education and Classicization of Ancient Chinese Novels in the Age of Fusion Media." Mobile Information Systems 2021 (November 12, 2021): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/1776243.

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In today’s new media environment, more and more communication contents have been digitized. Also because of digitization, traditional media and new media, which were previously well-defined services, have now merged, media fusion. In the age of media fusion, communication systems are updated more rapidly and more and more novels are being adapted into TV series. Literary education in ancient China has a long history and has played an important role in the development and dissemination of the ancient Chinese literature. Literary education refers to an educational behavior in which the educator
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Habibullah, Mosleh, and Ulfa Sufiya Rahmah. "The Patriarchal Power for Traditional Chinese Women in Pearl S. Buck’s “The Good Earth”." OKARA: Jurnal Bahasa dan Sastra 17, no. 1 (2023): 134–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.19105/ojbs.v17i1.8575.

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The subordination of women in society has become a common phenomenon. The woman's life in traditional Chinese culture is portrayed as someone who must be obedient, submissive, polite, have manners, and be loyal to her husband and others. The Good Earth novel reflects the life of traditional Chinese women in patriarchal power and the role of female characters. This study aims to describe the Chinese community traditions that govern women's lives in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and elucidate the orthodox tradition's effect on the role of female characters. The method applied was Librar
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Sarakaeva, Elina A. "The Beauty, the Beast and the Cinema. “The Chain Scheme” in Chinese Literature and Cinematography. Part 2." Corpus Mundi 4, no. 1 (2023): 50–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.46539/cmj.v4i1.78.

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In the first part of the work, entitled “The Beauty, the Beast and the Red Hare” published in “Corpus Mundi” Vol. 3(2), 2022, I trace the origin of the “Chain Scheme” legend in the Chinese historical chronicles, analyze the development of the plot in the poetry, fiction and other works of art and make conclusions about the interpretation of the main characters’ morals and motivations in pre-modern Chinese culture. In the present paper, which is the second part of the same research, I analyze artistic devices and narrative tropes in TV versions of “Three Kingdoms”, I comment on the changes that
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Books on the topic "Chinese books (Traditional characters) Fiction"

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邵國華. 愛在天鵝堡: 大外科前傳. 明窗出版社, 2009.

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tong, Su. . Mai Tian, 2010.

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誠信破產管理局. 點子出版, 2021.

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Si zhu: Zhang Ling zhong pian xiao shuo ji. Shi bao wen hua chu ban qi ye gu fen you xian gong si, 2017.

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Apiao: Phantom. Shi bao wen hua chu ban qi ye gu fen you xian gong si, 2018.

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Xin xiang shi cheng: Zhang Ling duan pian xiao shuo ji. 2017.

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後人類時代的它們. 水煮魚文化製作有限公司, 2018.

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宜卡傢俬過夜挑戰. 點子出版, 2023.

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宜卡傢俬過夜挑戰. 點子出版, 2023.

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《九龍城寨》電影海報書衣紀念版. Creation Cabin, 2024.

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Book chapters on the topic "Chinese books (Traditional characters) Fiction"

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"8. Relational Characterization and Ambiguous Characters." In Traditional Chinese Fiction and Fiction Commentary. Stanford University Press, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780804764957-011.

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Corthron, Kia. "From Reflex and Bone Structure." In The Essential Clarence Major. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469656007.003.0001.

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Part One of the book contains excerpts from six of Clarence Major’s novels: Reflex and Bone Structure, My Amputations, Such Was the Season, Painted Turtle: Woman with Guitar, Dirty Bird Blues, and One Flesh. Reflex and Bone Structure (1975) is a narrative of subtle clues regarding Majors’s Manhattan characters; the story then shifts to a road trip. Painted Turtle is an examination of Zuni life from the perspective of the narrator, who meets the title character as an adult and, from the stories she has told him, pieces together her existence from childhood on. The novel incorporates cultural la
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Price, Leah. "The Book as Go-Between: Domestic Servants and Forced Reading." In How to Do Things with Books in Victorian Britain. Princeton University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691114170.003.0007.

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This chapter assesses why secular fiction devoted so much space to jokes about tract distributing. Where tracts imitate the formal conventions of the same novels with which they competed, mid-Victorian novels almost obsessively represent characters distributing—though rarely reading—tracts. Yet tract distribution was only one among several practices that the secular press used to figure questions about the relation between supply and demand. The experiences of being handed a tract, read aloud to, and tricked into mistaking printed advertisements for personal letters, all provided the novel wit
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Dudbridge, Glen. "The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries." In The Legend Of Miaoshan Revised Edition. Oxford University PressOxford, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199266715.003.0005.

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Abstract After this long period of concealed transmission—an extended progress irregularly glimpsed in scattered sources and inferred as a submerged baojuan tradition—the story reappears in the sixteenth century, now in full illumination. Historians of Chinese fiction and drama have long recognized in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries a period of incomparable fertility and activity both in the development of vernacular literary forms, and in the production of books for a wide public readership. The legend of Miaoshan was one of many traditional themes now adapted and brought before the r
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"The Queen of Poisons." In Poisonous Tales. The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/9781839164811-00092.

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The second death from Romeo & Juliet is that of Romeo, who drinks a fatal dose of poison he bought from an apothecary after learning of Juliet’s ‘death’. The poison is not named by Shakespeare, but is now thought to be aconite, otherwise known as “wolfsbane” or “monkshood”. Aconite species contain several poisonous chemicals, the most deadly of which is aconitine. Aconitine can kill by dramatically slowing down the heart, leading to cardiac arrest. Aconite has been used in fiction (and for real) since classical times and its association with goddesses and magic continues to this day in the
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