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Implications of China's globalization for ASEAN trade and economic growth /Mulapruk, Pishayasinee. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
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Artistic dribblings: cultural relocation of Hong Kong's contemporary visual art scene ten years after the handoverDeschka, Anne. January 2007 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Literary and Cultural Studies / Master / Master of Arts
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Contagious capitalism : globalization and the politics of labor in China /Gallagher, Mary Elizabeth. January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Zugl.: Princeton, Univ., Diss., 2001. / Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Incorporating "old" and "new": globalization, cultural identity, and Peking opera in Hong Kong. / 「新」與「舊」的結合: 全球化、文化認同與香港京劇 / " xin" yu " jiu" de jie he: quan qiu hua, wen hua ren tong yu Xianggang jing juJanuary 2011 (has links)
Chan, Pui Lun. / "December 2010." / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 133-147). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Abstract of thesis entitled: --- p.i / Abstract (Chinese) --- p.iii / Acknowledgements --- p.iv / Table of Contents --- p.v / List of Figures and Tables --- p.viii / Romanization and Translation --- p.ix / Chapter Chapter One - --- Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter 1.1 --- "Motivations, Arguements and Methodology" --- p.2 / Chapter 1.2 --- Ethnomusicological Studies on Chinese Operas --- p.3 / Chapter 1.3 --- Studying Peking opera in Hong Kong --- p.5 / Biographies of Mainland Peking Opera Performers --- p.5 / Newspapers Reports and Columns --- p.6 / Interview Transcripts of Peking Opera Artists in Hong Kong --- p.7 / Government Documents and Archival Data --- p.8 / Fieldwork --- p.8 / Challenges and Limitations --- p.9 / Chapter 1.4 --- Thesis Outline --- p.10 / Chapter Chapter Two - --- The History of Peking Opera in Hong Kong --- p.14 / Chapter 2.1 --- The Dual Forces of Cultural Policies --- p.15 / Tour Performances as Diplomacy --- p.15 / The First Encounter: Mei Lan-fang's Tour in 1922 --- p.17 / Cultural Competition between the Two Chinese Regimes --- p.21 / Cultural Policy of the Colonial Government before 1980 --- p.24 / Chapter 2.2 --- Early Peking Opera Activities in Hong Kong --- p.26 / Peking Opera in Recordings and Radio Broadcasting --- p.26 / Peking Opera Films in the 1940s and 50s --- p.33 / Integrating Peking Opera with Local Martial Arts Films in the 1960s and 70s --- p.35 / Local Peking Opera Academies --- p.38 / Amateur Peking Opera Groups --- p.42 / Hybridization Between Peking Opera and Cantonese Opera --- p.43 / Chapter 2.3 --- An Entertainment for Mainland Emigrants --- p.48 / Chapter 2.4 --- Summary --- p.51 / Chapter Chapter Three - --- Contemporary Peking Opera Activities --- p.54 / Chapter 3.1 --- The Continuing Political Influence --- p.55 / The Shifting Dynamics of Political Influences in the Pre-HKSAR Period (From 1980 to 1997) --- p.55 / Increasing Support in the HKSAR Period (1997- present) --- p.58 / Chapter 3.2 --- Readapting Western Literature into Peking opera --- p.62 / Chapter 3.3 --- Other Contemporary Activities --- p.65 / General Observations --- p.65 / Musical Background of Participants and Audiences --- p.69 / Audiences'and Participants' Responses --- p.70 / Presentations Styles --- p.71 / Chapter 3.4 --- Summary --- p.78 / Chapter Chapter Four - --- Globalization Impacts on Peking opera in Hong Kong --- p.80 / Chapter 4.1 --- Peking Opera Activities and Globalization in Hong Kong --- p.83 / "Realizing the ""Imaginations""" --- p.83 / The Hybrid Form of Globalization r. --- p.88 / Chapter 4.2 --- A Traditional Interpretation of Globalization --- p.93 / "The ""Dilemma of Identity""" --- p.93 / The Dominance/Resistance Dichotomy in Ethnomusicological Studies --- p.94 / The Co-existence of Dichotomy --- p.96 / Chapter 4.3 --- Summary --- p.99 / Chapter Chapter Five - --- Conclusion --- p.101 / Chapter 5.1 --- Historical Activities --- p.101 / Chapter 5.2 --- Contemporary Activities --- p.104 / Chapter 5.3 --- Political Influences --- p.106 / Chapter 5.4 --- Globalization Impacts --- p.108 / Chapter Appendix I: --- Peking opera events presented by major cultural supporting sectors from 1976 to 2009 --- p.110 / Chapter Appendix II: --- Arts Development Council Grants to Local Peking Opera Troupes from the Financial Year of 1994/95 to 2007/08 --- p.120 / Chapter Appendix III: --- Other Peking Opera Activities Conducted by Local Peking Opera Troupes from 1976 to 2009 --- p.122 / Glossary --- p.126 / Bibliography --- p.133
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雙重背景下當代中國行政主體的重塑杜英 January 2003 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities / Department of Government and Public Administration
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In the Heat of Sentiments: Nationalism, Postsocialism, and Popular Culture in China, 1988-2007 / Nationalism, Postsocialism, and Popular Culture in China, 1988-2007Shen, Yipeng 06 1900 (has links)
xi, 284 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number. / My dissertation delves into the recent articulation of popular nationalism in
Mainland China, with particular emphasis on the changes that globalization and
transnationalism have brought about to the representation of the Chinese nation in
sentimental terms. Complementing the rich existing literature of Chinese nationalism that
focuses mainly on the pre-1949 period, my study explores the less-treaded contemporary
era characterized by the new historical condition of postsocialism, which features a
residual of the socialist past as well as its reinvention under new overwhelming trends of
globalization. Postsocialism and its consequences-the deepening of a neoliberalist economic refonn, the state-intellectual promotion of cultural economy, the emergence of
a dominant consumer culture, etc.-have produced new issues existing scholarship on Chinese nationalism has yet to address. One such issue is how the paradoxical entity of
the "nation" in time and space has been fragmented by the accretion of diversified voices
from a wide spectrum of Chinese society. In postsocialist China, the agents imagining the
nation include not only regulars like the state and intellectuals, but also new players like
mass-media elites and netizens (wangmin). I argue that these voices of different social
forces that break up the hegemony of the state in representing the nation-the result of
which being not that the state is excluded from this enterprise but that it now tells only
part of the story-become expressed as modes of national sentiments (minzu qinggan)
when the nation is imagined under the historical condition of postsocialism. My study
then explores in detail the fashioning and refashioning of contemporary Chinese
subjectivity, as it relates through the joining of national sentiments to the literal and
figurative body of the nation and the social power structure, by analyzing these specific
voices in a broad range of popular texts from TV, film, and the Internet. The detailed
examination includes four chapters dealing with specific modes of national sentiments
articulated by the intellectuals, the state, the mass-media elites, and the netizens,
respectively. / Committee in charge: Tze-lan Sang, Co-Chairperson, East Asian Languages & Literature;
David Leiwei Li, Co-Chairperson, English;
Maram Epstein, Member, East Asian Languages & Literature;
Bryna Goodman, Outside Member, History
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