wmcisnowhere.wordpress.com
Recent photographs | wmc is now here
https://wmcisnowhere.wordpress.com/2014/06/04/recent-photographs
Wmc is now here. The Alien from "Aliens" Was Originally Chinese, Alleges Flea Market Art Find. Ghostly Apparition of Entire City Appears over Chinese River. China Tries to Curb Fancy Tombs of the Rich that Grate on the Poor. Torn Pieces of Ancient Chinese Painting Reunited. Good Characters Finds Art in Science of Translation. Calls . . . Red lanterns, Zhang Yimou, and Gong Li. On Sherlock Holmes, Russian …. On Fog and snow. Chandra Wohleber on The Shape of a Room —…. Novels in 3 Lines. Thomas H. Hahn.
wangbo.blogtown.co.nz
bezdomny ex patria » Blog Archive » naive?
http://wangbo.blogtown.co.nz/2014/07/04/naive
Ramblings of an expat Kiwi living in one small corner of Beijing. July 4th, 2014. Well, I’m kinda hoping for David Shambaugh’s sake that there’s a bit of misreporting going on here. Quotes being taken out of context, or something like that, because:. 8220;Google is down. Yahoo is own Bing is down. You can’t access the outside world.”. And that, dear friends, is. I have my gmail open in another tab, I just googled. David Shambaugh and opened the Wikipedia article on him. 8220;Australia is doing it, Asean ...
nickstember.com
The Interbellum Manhua Boom - Nick Stember
http://www.nickstember.com/interbellum-manhua-boom
Chinese comics and manhua. The Interbellum Manhua Boom. August 8, 2014. Between World War I and World War II China experienced it’s first boom in the production and appreciation of cartoons and. Although several notable cartoon and proto-cartoon publications predate World War I (and more importantly in China, the collapse of the Qing in 1911),. It is the 1920s and 1930s which saw comic strips and cartoons reach their highest social currency in China, one that has perhaps yet to be rivaled even today.
chinabilityblog.blogspot.com
Ken Davies' Chinability blog: Hong Kong pictured now
http://chinabilityblog.blogspot.com/2014/10/hong-kong-pictured-now.html
Ken Davies' Chinability blog. Occasional comments by Ken Davies on China's economy and business climate (and occasionally other things). Friday, 3 October 2014. Hong Kong pictured now. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Hong Kong: A Time to Talk. Hong Kong pictured now. Hong Kong: power to the people - but peacefully, p. China's policy towards foreign investment takes an incremental step forward. Ken Davies' "China Investment Policy: An Update" published by OECD. Music as a Natural Resource. Organisatio...
chinabilityblog.blogspot.com
Ken Davies' Chinability blog: Hong Kong: power to the people - but peacefully, please
http://chinabilityblog.blogspot.com/2014/10/hong-kong-power-to-people-but.html
Ken Davies' Chinability blog. Occasional comments by Ken Davies on China's economy and business climate (and occasionally other things). Thursday, 2 October 2014. Hong Kong: power to the people - but peacefully, please. I can not keep quiet about this situation. I am adding to these pictures every day, so please come back often to see how things are developing. The trouble is, there doesn't seem to be a leader you can address this question to. I am writing this now because a section of the protestors has...
chinabilityblog.blogspot.com
Ken Davies' Chinability blog: Ken Davies' article on China's new investment rules (Nikkei Asian Review)
http://chinabilityblog.blogspot.com/2015/02/february-20-2015-700-pm-jst-ken-davies.html
Ken Davies' Chinability blog. Occasional comments by Ken Davies on China's economy and business climate (and occasionally other things). Tuesday, 24 February 2015. Ken Davies' article on China's new investment rules (Nikkei Asian Review). February 20, 2015 7:00 pm JST. China's new investment rules: A step forward, but more is needed. This process continues the trend of increasing transparency in the formulation of economic laws that started with the 2007 Labor Contract Law. The new law is designed to rep...
chinabilityblog.blogspot.com
Ken Davies' Chinability blog: OECD Economic Survey of China now out
http://chinabilityblog.blogspot.com/2015/03/oecd-economic-survey-of-china-now-out.html
Ken Davies' Chinability blog. Occasional comments by Ken Davies on China's economy and business climate (and occasionally other things). Friday, 20 March 2015. OECD Economic Survey of China now out. 20/03/2015 - After three decades of extraordinary economic development, China is shifting to a slower and more sustainable growth path. Further reforms are now needed to ensure that future growth is resilient, inclusive and green, according to the OECD’s latest Economic Survey of China. Read the full speech.
chinabilityblog.blogspot.com
Ken Davies' Chinability blog: Road map for financial reform by Zhou Xiaochuan
http://chinabilityblog.blogspot.com/2013/12/road-map-for-financial-reform-by-zhou.html
Ken Davies' Chinability blog. Occasional comments by Ken Davies on China's economy and business climate (and occasionally other things). Wednesday, 11 December 2013. Road map for financial reform by Zhou Xiaochuan. This article is the first part of an excerpted translation from Chinese of a speech by Zhou Xiaochuan, Governor of the People's Bank of China, China's central bank, published in China Daily on December 11, 2013. A more competitive and inclusive financial services sector. A multi-layer capital ...
wmcisnowhere.wordpress.com
Saramago, an old influence | wmc is now here
https://wmcisnowhere.wordpress.com/2014/02/19/saramago-an-old-influence
Wmc is now here. The Alien from "Aliens" Was Originally Chinese, Alleges Flea Market Art Find. Ghostly Apparition of Entire City Appears over Chinese River. China Tries to Curb Fancy Tombs of the Rich that Grate on the Poor. Torn Pieces of Ancient Chinese Painting Reunited. Good Characters Finds Art in Science of Translation. Calls . . . Red lanterns, Zhang Yimou, and Gong Li. On Sherlock Holmes, Russian …. On Fog and snow. Chandra Wohleber on The Shape of a Room —…. Novels in 3 Lines. Thomas H. Hahn.
mychinesebooks.com
Chi Zijian, mémoire chinoise des juifs de Mandchourie. – Chinese book reviews
http://mychinesebooks.com/frchi-zijian-mmoire-chinoise-des-juifs-de-mandchourie
Recevoir les articles par mail. Recevoir les articles par mail. Chi Zijian, mémoire chinoise des juifs de Mandchourie. Mai 15, 2015. La vie des juifs à Harbin, en Mandchourie, pendant la première moitié du XXe siècle est un épisode peu connu que fait revivre avec talent la romancière chinoise Chi Zijian dans Bonsoir la rose . Elle est peu connue en France mais célèbre en Chine avec trois prix littéraires Lu Xun et un prix Mao Dun (le Goncourt chinois) en 2008. (Lire la suite sur Rue89). Avril 28, 2016.
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