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Promoted ContentHumanities & Social SciencesDecember 2019 - December 2024
Mencius
by Mencius,Yang Bojun,Yang Fengbin
Mencius asserted the innate goodness of the individual, believing that it was society's influence – its lack of a positive cultivating influence – that caused bad moral character. "He who exerts his mind to the utmost knows his nature" and "the way of learning is none other than finding the lost mind.”
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Promoted ContentHumanities & Social Sciences
Teenagers Reading Chinese Philosophy
by Zhang Jiahua
In the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period of ancient China, the philosophical views of various schools met and contended, arousing a more brilliant spark of wisdom. The epic and unprecedented movement in the academy world was called the "Contention of a Hundred Schools of Thought." Scholars of various schools have written their wisdom achievements that they strove to secure through lifetime hard work into their own academic works, leaving us with a timeless ideological wealth that can teach us morals and enlighten our wisdom. With simple and fluent texts and concise interpretation, Teenagers Reading Chinese Philosophy systematically introduces the essence of the philosophical thoughts of philosophers including Confucius, Mencius, Mozi, Laozi, Zhuangzi, Xun Kuang, and Han Feizi. As an enlightening book of Chinese philosophy designed for children, it eliminates the barriers to reading classical Chinese in the pre-Qin period, and makes the "abstruse and mysterious" philosophy easy for children to understand.
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Trusted PartnerApril 2021
The Analects
by Liu Qiang
The Analects is a Confucian classic that records the words and deeds of Confucius and his disciples, compiled by Confucius and his disciples. There are 20 chapters in the book, with quotations as the main part and narrative as the supplement. It focuses on the propositions and doctrines of Confucius in the fields of ideology and politics, philosophy and culture, ethics and morality, education and self-cultivation. "The Analects" and "The Great Learning", "The Doctrine of the Mean" and "Mencius" are also called the "Four Books", which are important symbols of Chinese traditional culture. This edition of "The Analects of Confucius" is edited and edited, integrating classical masterpieces and information technology. It is translated, commented and recorded by Liu Qiang, a professor of Tongji University and the guest speaker of "Hundreds of Discourses." "This classic is presented in the form of digital media, which will surely generate new economic and social benefits.
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2016
Picture Story of Chinese Folktales (7 volumes)
by Xia Shuyu, Duan Weijun , Yang yongqing,etc.
This series of books are full of unique charm of China. It possesses Chinese comic style, top-level painting pictures, bilingual texts of Chinese and English and abundant connotation of Chinese traditional cultural. There are 7 volumes involved: Cai Lun’s Invention of Papermaking, Mencius’ Mother, Strokes Fell Great Oaks, Mi Fu Learns Calligraphy, Prodigy Zhuge Ke, Sesshu Paints Mouse and Magic Coloring Pen. It’s prepared for children and presents a memorable China.
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May 2015
Encyclopedia of Chinese Civilization Series (English) (10 titles)
by Editorial Committee
Encyclopedia of Chinese Civilization Series depicts the essence of China with vivid images and detailed captions. There are a total of 10 books, each with their own theme. Thanks to its vivid, interesting, and popular content,readers can appreciate the charm and warmth of Chinese culture through an easy and pleasant reading experience.
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FictionApril 2020
GREEN MONKEY SYNDROME
by Andrew Yeh
Disaster, biological warfare, environmental catastrophe, and resistance to hegemony. No, it’s not a description of 2020; it’s Andrew Yeh’s science fiction collection, GREEN MONKEY SYNDROME. Originally published in 1987 and has never gone out of print, these stories reflect a dystopian future so resonant with our own, it is almost like they came out yesterday. Set in a fictional East Asia, the four stories narrate the struggles of the tiny island nation of Buron to resist the onslaught of its much bigger neighbor, Garsia, via any means necessary. “Green Monkey Syndrome” describes the disaster of a pathogenic weapon leaked among indigenous tribespeople; “The Gaoka Case” tracks through case files a pharmaceutical offensive designed to take advantage of the enemy’s patriarchal culture; “I Love Thee Winona” and “The Lost Bird” describe campaigns to manipulate disastrous weather patterns and deliver bio-weapons through migrating birds. These stories, fortified by the author’s own extensive research, paint a picture of transnational warfare and brutal environmental imbalance that will chill the blood of anyone who has been reading this year’s news. Yeh’s surgically precise language and compelling narratives read like 1984 meets BRAVE NEW WORLD meets the front page of the New York Times.