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         Xingjian Gao:     more books (104)
  1. Ink Dances in Limbo: Gao Xingjian's Writing As Cultural Translation by Jessica Yeung, 2009-02-28
  2. Gao Xingjian's Idea of Theatre: From the Word to the Image (Sinica Leidensia) by Izabella Labedzka, 2008-08-15
  3. One Man's Bible by Gao Xingjian, 2004-03-31
  4. Yeren: Tradition und Avantgarde in Gao Xingjians Theaterstuck "Die Wilden" (1985) (Chinathemen) (German Edition) by Monica Basting, 1988
  5. Yi ge ren de sheng jing ('One Man's Bible' in Traditional Chinese Characters) by Xingjian Gao, 1999-04
  6. Die Angel meines GroÃ?vaters: Erzählungen by Xingjian Gao,
  7. Buy a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather ('Gei wo lao ye mai yu gan', in traditional Chinese, NOT in English) by Xingjian Gao, 2001-02-01
  8. Das Buch eines einsamen Menschen by Xingjian Gao, 2006-04-30
  9. Au bord de la vie by Gao Xingjian, 1993-01-01
  10. El libro de un hombre solo/ The Book of the Lonesome Man (Spanish Edition) by Xingjian Gao, 2008-02-25
  11. Der Berg der Seele. by Xingjian Gao, 2003-07-01
  12. Somnambule (Le) by Gao Xingjian, 2000-11-01
  13. Die Busstation (Chinathemen) by Xingjian Gao, 1988
  14. Soul Mountain [Full leather signed by the author] by Gao Xingjian, 2006

21. Gao Xingjian Winner Of The 2000 Nobel Prize In Literature
gao xingjian, a Nobel Prize Laureate in Literature, at the Nobel Prize Internet Archive.
http://almaz.com/nobel/literature/2000a.html
G AO X INGJIAN
2000 Nobel Laureate in Literature
    for an oeuvre of universal validity, bitter insights and linguistic ingenuity, which has opened new paths for the Chinese novel and drama.
Background
  • Born: January 4, 1940
  • Place of birth: Ganzhou (Jiangxi province), China
  • Residence: Paris, France
Book Store Featured Internet Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors

22. Gao Xingjian: Life As A Literature Laureate | Arts And Entertainment | BBC World
gao xingjian Life As A Literature Laureate One of China s best known dissidents, the writer and playwright, gao xingjian was awarded the Nobel Prize for
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/arts/highlights/010316_xingian.shtml
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You are in: Front Page Arts, Music and Entertainment Saturday 17 March, 2001
Gao Xingjian: Life As A Literature Laureate
One of China's best known dissidents, the writer and playwright, Gao Xingjian was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2000. Gao, who left China in 1987, is the first Chinese Nobel literature laureate. Prior to winning the award the writer lived in relative obscurity in Paris. In China his work has been banned since 1989, the award consequently has divided the Chinese community. The criticism comes as no surprise to the writer who has faced disapproval throughout his career. On a recent trip to London, Gao talked to Chen Li of the Mandarin China Reel programme about life after the award. Symbol Status A telephone call on 12th October 2000 changed Gao Xingjian's life forever. The call from the Nobel Prize Committee for Literature confirmed that he had become the first Chinese writer ever to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. The committee awarded the prize 'for an oeuvre of universal validity, bitter insights and linguistic ingenuity, which has opened new paths for the Chinese novel and drama.' Since then he has been under constant bombardment from the media. He has given hundreds of interviews and answered thousands of questions. In his words he has become 'a society person'; a role that he would rather not play:

23. Gao Xingjian --  Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Britannica online encyclopedia article on gao xingjian Chinese émigré novelist, playwright, and critic who in 2000 was awarded the Nobel Prize for
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9345633
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Gao Xingjian
Page 1 of 1 born January 4, 1940, Ganzhou, Jiangxi province, China Wade-Giles romanization Kao Hsing-chien Special Offer! Activate a FREE trial to Britannica Online , your complete (re)search engine for when you need to be right. Gao was educated in state schools and from 1957 to 1962 attended the Beijing Foreign Languages Institute, where he earned a degree in French. Persecuted as an intellectual during the Cultural Revolution , Gao was forced to destroy his early writings and was later sent to a reeducation camp, where he endured nearly six years of hard labour. Afterward he was assigned by the government to work at the Foreign Languages Press. He became a translator but was unable to publish his work or travel abroad until 1979. Gao first gained critical recognition with the publication of the novella Hanye zhong de xingchen Juedui xinhao Alarm Signal ), written in collaboration with Liu Huiyuan, was performed. His second and most celebrated play

24. Gao Xingjian And "Soul Mountain": Ambivalent Storytelling
Idiotprogrammer Essay Soul Mountain by gao xingjian.
http://www.imaginaryplanet.net/essays/literary/soulmountain.php
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Gao Xingjian and "Soul Mountain" : Ambivalent Storytelling
By Robert Nagle , Houston, Texas, September 2002 Summary: A Texas writer who listens to "Soul Mountain" while driving in his car around Houston describes Gao Xingjian's ambivalence towards the modern novel and traditional storytelling.
  • The Peripatetic Novel Purposeful Formlessness Beauty or Evil Nature vs. Bureaucrats ... The Storyteller's Discomfort
  • THE PERIPATETIC NOVEL This review is a little special: it's about a book I heard completely while driving around in my car. I recently returned to my home town, Houston, a city where people spend unbearable amounts of time in the solitude of their cars, driving from work to home and work again. In Houston waiting in traffic is synonymous with living. One passes through neighborhoods in air-conditioned comfort, cursing the red lights and slow-moving cars. The purpose of Houston life, it seems, is to wander around without having to feel the breeze or notice the trees, people or shops. The only interruption to the routine are the weekly visits to the gas station, where the traveler parks, inserts his debit card into the machine and pumps gas into his tank Then, if he is lucky, he can leave as quickly as he came, merging into the grumbling fog of traffic.

    25. An Interview With Author Amitav Ghosh.
    gao xingjian is the first Chinese recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature. Born in 1940 in Jiangxi Province, gao xingjian earned a degree in French
    http://www.asiasource.org/arts/gao.cfm

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    VIEWS ... LINKS related links Asia EXPERTS specialists database Asia EVENTS worldwide calendar Asiain NYC cultural travel guide Asia BULLETIN email updates RESOURCES Asian Holidays Chronologies Country Comparison Dictionary Tool ... press releases Information on the Asia Society, its programs, publications, exhibitions, regional centers, membership, and more. Stay informed of Asia Society events with free weekly updates. Subscribe Become an Asia Society Member and receive: invitations to member-only receptions, discounts on tickets to performances, films and lectures, and purchases at Asia Store; and much more. A Conversation with Gao Xingjian Gao Xingjian is the first Chinese recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature. Born in 1940 in Jiangxi Province, Gao Xingjian earned a degree in French literature in Beijing and settled in Paris in 1987. His plays and translations set the trend for experimental drama in China, and he wrote Soul Mountain (HarperCollins) based on a journey he made through the remote mountains and ancient forests of southwest China.

    26. Radio National - Late Night Live - About
    Born in China in 1940, gao xingjian s earliest recollections are of fleeing the invading Japanese forces. As a child he was encouraged to paint,
    http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/lnl/stories/s148701.htm

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    Wednesday 5 July 2000
    Gao Xingjian
    Summary
    Guests on this program
    Gao Xingjian
    Publications
    "Soul Mountain"
    Author: Gao Xingjian/translated from the Chinese by Mabel Lee
    published by Flamingo back to the Late Night Live homepage
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    27. Gao Xingjian Collection Home
    Translate this page .
    http://www.lib.cuhk.edu.hk/electronic/gao/gao_home_e.htm

    28. Gao Xingjian Quotes
    A collection of quotes attributed to Chinese author gao xingjian.
    http://www.notable-quotes.com/x/xingjian_gao.html
    Browse quotes by subject Browse quotes by author
    GAO XINGJIAN QUOTES Everybody can write poetry, just like everybody knows how to make love. GAO XINGJIAN, The Other Shore To subvert is not the aim of literature, its value lies in discovering and revealing what is rarely known, little known, thought to be known but in fact not very well known of the truth of the human world. It would seem that truth is the unassailable and most basic quality of literature. GAO XINGJIAN, Nobel Lecture, 2000 When you're telling a story, you've got to give details. GAO XINGJIAN, Dialogue and Rebuttal Maybe there isn't a God after all, maybe there's only a universe rotating by itself like a millstone. GAO XINGJIAN, The Other Shore Dreams are more real than reality itself, they're closer to the self. GAO XINGJIAN, Dialogue and Rebuttal Everyone has to have either this or that problem, if he can't find any problem, he loses all reason for living. GAO XINGJIAN, Nocturnal Wanderer Walk where your heart leads you, there are no restrictions and no burdens. GAO XINGJIAN

    29. Gao Xingjian
    A biography of Chineseborn dramatist gao xingjian.
    http://www.theatrehistory.com/asian/gao_xingjian.html
    GAO XINGJIAN
    The following biography by Jerome P. Crabb was originally published on this website on October 12, 2006.
    Purchase Plays by Gao Xingjian
    China Reconstructs Stars on a Cold Night (Hanye zhong de xingchen) A Preliminary Discussion of the Art of Modern Fiction (Xiandai xiaoshuo jiqiao chutan) Bus Stop Waiting for Godot Bus Stop were shut down by the authorities, Gao finally decided to relocate, convinced that his plays would never again be performed in China. In 1987, Gao settled in France as a political refugee and subsequently obtained French citizenship. After the Tiananmen Square protest of June 4, 1989, in which the Chinese government brutally suppressed a student demonstration and left as many as 2600 civilians dead, he published a play entitled Fugitives (Taowang) which takes place against the background of the massacre. In response to the play, the Chinese government declared Gao persona non grata and officially banned all of his works. But while his plays have been condemned and banned in China, they have been heaped with honors and awards throughout the rest of the world. Gao is also a respected artist and provides the cover art for his own books. Other play by Gao include

    30. Singapore Art Museum
    Featuring 60 ink works with 10 new works to be unveiled, gao xingjian As a writerpainter, gao xingjian takes hold of his artistic practice with a
    http://www.nhb.gov.sg/SAM/Exhibitions/OnShowNow/GaoXingjian.htm
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    Gao Xingjian Experience Gao Xingjian Experience 17 November 2005 - 7 February 2006 SAM Galleries Curator: Patricia Ong Featuring 60 ink works with 10 new works to be unveiled, Gao Xingjian Experience is the first retrospective exhibition by the Nobel Prize Laureate in Asia. An acclaimed novelist and playwright, the literary award winner is also well known for his ink paintings. As a writer-painter, Gao Xingjian takes hold of his artistic practice with a freedom that espouses neither any forms of attachments nor inhibitions. Referring to the renderings of the ink works as another mode of expression to his other literary output, Gao emphasizes on the contemplation of the inner vision as the crux of painting. Born in China in 1940, Gao is currently residing in Paris. He has held about 30 world-wide exhibitions spanning Asia, Europe and the United States.

    31. Nobel Laureate 2000 Gao Xingjian And His Novel
    As a translator, she has brought the novel Soul Mountain by Nobel Laureate 2000 gao xingjian to English readers (Sydney HarperCollinsPublishers,
    http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu/clcweb00-3/lee00.html
    CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture: A WWWeb Journal ISSN 1481-4374
    CLCWeb Library of Research and Information
    CLCWeb Contents 2.3 (September 2000)
    Purdue University Press
    Mabel LEE

    Author's profile: Mabel Lee works in Chinese studies and comparative literature. A member of the faculty of the University of Sydney 1966-2000, Lee is now an honorary associate professor of Chinese Studies. She has published widely books and articles in Chinese and comparative literature. For a review article of her recent work, see Xiaoyi Zhou, "East and West Comparative Literature and Culture: A Review Article of New Work by Lee and Collected Volumes by Lee and Syrokomla-Stefanowska" in CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu/clcweb00-3/books00-3.html >. As a translator, she has brought the novel Soul Mountain by Nobel Laureate 2000 Gao Xingjian to English readers (Sydney: HarperCollins Publishers http://www.harpercollins.com.au >). Her present article is based on Gao Xingjian's writings and on her conversations with Gao Xingjian over the past ten years. She visited Gao Xingjian in Paris soon after the Chinese publication of the novel in late 1990 and soon thereafter Lee began to translate Gao's work and to analyse Gao's texts in literary and cultural studies. Lee is co-editor of the University of Sydney East Asian and World Literature series and she serves on the advisory board of CLCWeb : Comparative Literature and Culture

    32. Gao Xingjian Receives 2000 Nobel Prize In Literature
    The Nobel Prize in Literature for 2000 goes to the Chinese writer gao xingjian for an uvre of universal validity, bitter insights and linguistic
    http://www.isop.ucla.edu/eas/documents/2000Nobel.htm
    UCLA Center for East Asian Studies East Asian Studies News File Gao Xingjian Receives 2000 Nobel Prize in Literature October 12, 2000 Nobel Committee News Reports Earlier Web Reviews His Painting ... Scholarly Looks at His Writing Nobel Prize Committee's Announcement English Chinese (trad.) Chinese (simplified) " The Nobel Prize in Literature for 2000 goes to the Chinese writer Gao Xingjian ' for an œuvre of universal validity, bitter insights and linguistic ingenuity, which has opened new paths for the Chinese novel and drama.'
    " In the writing of Gao Xingjian literature is born anew from the struggle of the individual to survive the history of the masses. He is a perspicacious sceptic who makes no claim to be able to explain the world. He asserts that he has found freedom only in writing." English Bibliography Chinese Bibliography (trad./.pdf file) Chinese Bibliography (simplifie./.pdf file) News Accounts BBC (UK) The 30 minute East Asia Today program for Thursday, October 12, 2000

    33. Gao Xingjian From HarperCollins Publishers
    gao xingjian (whose name is pronounced gow shingjen) is the first Chinese recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature. Born in 1940 in Jiangxi province in
    http://www.harpercollins.com/authors/20863/Gao_Xingjian/index.aspx
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    Gao Xingjian
    Gao Xingjian (whose name is pronounced gow shing-jen) is the first Chinese recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature. Born in 1940 in Jiangxi province in eastern China, he has lived in France since 1987. Gao Xingjian is an artistic innovator, in both the visual arts and literature. He is that rare multitalented artist who excels as novelist, playwright, essayist, director, and painter. In addition to Soul Mountain and One Man's Bible, a book of his plays, The Other Shore, and a volume of his paintings, Return to Painting

    34. Chez Pim: "La Montagne De L'âme" Utterly Engrossing
    50 pages into gao xingjian s La montagne de l âme that I began reading Here s gao xingjian on nostalgia, in an old courtyard of his childhood.
    http://www.chezpim.com/blogs/2004/07/la_montagne_de_.html
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    "La montagne de l'¢me" utterly engrossing
    50 pages into Gao Xingjian's "La montagne de l'¢me" that I began reading yesterday. beautiful, lyrical, vivid, nostalgic proseI am absolutely in love with this book. The book is 700 pages long. It will take me a year to finishsince I am reading the French translation instead of the English onebut I am sure it will be entirely worth it. Here's Gao Xingjian on nostalgia, in an old courtyard of his childhood...
    Sur le toit, les herbes s¨ches ou vivantes, blanches ou vertes, se balancent doucement au vent. Cela fait combien d'ann©es que tu n'as pas revu ces herbes sur les toits? Pieds nus, tu fais claquer tes pas sur les dalles de pierre profond©ment marqu©es par les traces des roues des brouettes et tu ©merges de ton enfance, tu ©merges dans le pr©sent." Isn't that beautiful? The book is written in normal tenses, not in pass© simple, and uses first and second person pronouns instead of names, making it amazingly engrossing, grabbing your attention and not letting go. (That the book is not written in pass© simple also has a side effect of making it much easier to read with my mediocre French.) I am hooked.

    35. Gao Xingjian : Warwick Arts Centre
    A playwright, novelist, painter, translator, stage director and critic, gao xingjian defies simplistic definitions of the Chinese writerintellectual in
    http://www.warwickartscentre.co.uk/events/id/3633
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    A playwright, novelist, painter, translator, stage director and critic, Gao Xingjian defies simplistic definitions of the 'Chinese writer-intellectual' in contemporary times. He wrote the first Chinese absurdist play and was instrumental in shaping the Chinese cultural landscape in the early 1980s. In 1986, the Chinese authorities banned performances of his works and not long after he left China and settled in Paris as a political refugee.
    In 2000, he became the first writer in Chinese to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Gao's profound reflections on life and the human soul transcend linguistic, political or cultural boundaries.

    36. Conceison, Gao Xingjian, Bus Stop
    The plays of gao xingjian present a daunting challenge—even in English translation and even for an ideal audience familiar with both the Western postmodern
    http://mclc.osu.edu/rc/pubs/conceison.htm
    Fleshing out the Dramaturgy of Gao Xingjian By Claire Conceison
    Published by the MCLC Resource Center
    Video footage (see figure captions 3 and 10) used by permission.

    Fig.1: Program from University of Michigan production of The Bus Stop. The background is a painting entitled "Meditation" (1994), used by permission of Gao Xingjian ]; he writes his plays for performance and offers numerous suggestions as an appendix to each script, detailing ideal staging techniques. If indeed his dramaturgy is foremost in his body of literature and his plays are expressly performative, then consideration of his plays in/as performance is crucial to an informed understanding of Gao as a writer, intellectual, and exile. What I discovered in actually staging one of his plays at the University of Michigan in March 2001after reading Gao's scripts in both English and Chinese over the past decadewas that I had never truly engaged with the play Chezhan (The Bus Stop) until I actively envisioned (and realized) it as performance. I also assigned the play to my theatre history class and found that those students who read it and those students who saw it staged (both in English translation [

    37. Gao Xingjian - Biography, Plus Book Reviews & Excerpts.
    A biography of gao xingjian, plus book reviews and book excerpts from one or more books by xingjian.
    http://www.bookbrowse.com/biographies/index.cfm?author_number=529

    38. Gao Xingjian News - The New York Times
    News about gao xingjian. Commentary and archival information about gao xingjian from The New York Times.
    http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/gao_xingjian/index.
    @import url(http://graphics8.nytimes.com/css/topic/screen/200704/topic.css); Sunday, January 27, 2008
    Times Topics

    39. Gao Xingjian On Artnet
    gao xingjian (Chinese, 1940) Find works of art, auction results sale prices of artist gao xingjian at galleries and auctions worldwide.
    http://www.artnet.com/artist/726059/gao-xingjian.html
    Gao Xingjian (Chinese, 1940)
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    Gao Xingjian
    La Montagne de Reve
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    Gao Xingjian
    La Pleine Lune Goedhuis Contemporary Gao Xingjian Fugue III Goedhuis Contemporary Past auction results View All Gao Xingjian Moonlight (Clair de lune) Sold: Mar 31, 2006 lot detail Gao Xingjian Unexpected Sold: Apr 22, 2001 lot detail Gao Xingjian Untitled Sold: Dec 3, 2007 lot detail Gao Xingjian Biography Born in Jiangxi Province, China Sought refuge in France after the riots at Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China Inducted as Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres de la France Received the Belgian Prix Communauté française for his play le Somnambule Awarded Le Prix du Nouvel An Chinois for his novel la Montagne de l'âme Awarded Nobel Prize for Literature for Soul Mountain Currently lives and works in Paris, France

    40. GAO XINGJIAN – JULIA ALVAREZ
    A literary and arts event featuring Julia Alvarez and gao xingjian. Paintings featured in Between Figurative and Abstract Recent Paintings by gao xingjian
    http://gao-alvarez.com/photos.html
    Between Homeland and Heartland
    A literary and arts event featuring Julia Alvarez and Gao Xingjian
    Paintings featured in Between Figurative and Abstract: Recent Paintings by Gao Xingjian

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