Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Authors - Xingjian Gao
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-77 of 77    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Xingjian Gao:     more books (104)
  1. Gao Xingjian. Snow in August.(Book Review): An article from: World Literature Today by Philip F. Williams, 2005-05-01
  2. Chinese Dramatists and Playwrights: Lao She, Gao Xingjian, Cao Yu, Han Lao Da, Ping Lu, Gao Lian, Zhang Junxiang, P. C. Chang, Tang Ti-Sheng
  3. Ethnic Chinese Nobel Laureates: Charles K. Kao, Roger Y. Tsien, Steven Chu, Gao Xingjian, Tsung-Dao Lee, Yuan T. Lee, Chen Ning Yang
  4. Shakespeare segun Bloom: el Nobel Gao Xingjian; Alvaro Mutis, premio Cervantes; Harold Bloom pope de la critica literaria, y Javier Cercas, autor de un ... relacionado ): An article from: Epoca by Fatima Uribarri, 2002-12-27
  5. Pronto se leerá en México al Nobel de Literatura Gao Xingjian.(TT: Soon, one may read in Mexico a work by Nobel Prize recipient Gao Xingjian.)(Artículo Breve): An article from: Proceso by Judith Amador Tello, 2000-10-15
  6. French People of Chinese Descent: Yo-Yo Ma, Gao Xingjian, Oscar Temaru, Mariane Pearl, Chinese Diaspora in France, Chinois, Gaston Tong Sang
  7. Recent Works of Gao Xingjian (Exhibition of works done between 2002-2006)
  8. El templo.(extracto del libro La caña de pescar de mi abuelo del autor Gao Xingjian)(TT: The temple.)(TA: excerpt from book My Grandfather's Fishing Stick ... An article from: Letras Libres by Gao Xingjian, 2000-12-01
  9. Un Nobel tras el telón de bambú: el último Premio Nobel de Literatura visita esta semana España para promocionar "La montaña del alma" (Ediciones del Bronce), ... author Gao Xingjian): An article from: Epoca by Fátima Uríbarri, 2001-05-20
  10. Écrivain Chinois: Gao Xingjian, François Cheng, Lao Tseu, Ba Jin, Li M'hâ Ong, Cao Cao, Cao Xueqin, Li Bai, Jin Yong, Woeser, Chow Ching Lie (French Edition)
  11. Gao Xingjian, One Man's Bible.(Book Review): An article from: World Literature Today by Milton J. Bates, 2004-01-01
  12. Gao Xingjian. One Man's Bible.(Book Review) (book review): An article from: The Review of Contemporary Fiction by Jason Picone, 2003-03-22
  13. BETWEEN THE INDIVIDUAL & THE COLLECTIVE.(Gao Xingjian): An article from: World Literature Today by Sylvia Li-chun Lin, 2001-01-01
  14. Écrivain Chinois Francophone: Gao Xingjian, François Cheng, Shan Sa, Ying Chen, Dai Sijie, Ya Ding, Chen Jitong (French Edition)

61. Lamson Library
gao xingjian ; translated from the Chinese by Mabel Lee When gao xingjian was crowned Nobel Laureate in 2000, it was the first time in the hundredyear
http://library.plymouth.edu/browse/?auth=Gao, Xingjian

62. Gale - E-Docs - Gao Xingjian S The Other Shore A Study Guide
gao xingjian s The Other Shore A Study Guide from Gale s Drama for Students (Volume 21, Chapter 9). Format Electronic book text
http://doi.contentdirections.com/mr/gale_edoc.jsp?doi=10.1223/GALFSDFS0000312

63. A Guy's Moleskine Notebook
33 One Man s Bible gao xingjian. One Man s Bible is a profound meditation on the excruciating effects of sordid political oppression on human spirit.
http://mattviews.blogspot.com/2006/03/33-one-mans-bible-gao-xingjian.html
Notify Blogger about objectionable content.
What does this mean?
Send via SMS BlogThis!
A Guy's Moleskine Notebook
Thoughts and reflections on works of fiction and literature. Pondering of life through pictures and words. Babbling about gay rights. Travelogues and anecdotes.
Book Reviews
  • [1] Annie Proulx: Brokeback Mountain [2] Arthur Golden: Memoirs of a Geisha [3] Yu Hua: To Live [4] Alan Hollinghurst: The Line of Beauty ... [62] Tom Perrotta: Little Children
  • Current Reading
    March 17, 2006
    [33] One Man's Bible - Gao Xingjian
    One Man's Bible is a profound meditation on the excruciating effects of sordid political oppression on human spirit. The sobriety of writing bespeaks a dignity, which is an awareness of existence, and it is in this existence that the power of the frail individual lies. In a laudably detached voice, Gao Xinjian stipples a vivid picture of human frailty, repression and suffering under the totalitarian regime that exists only in memory, like a hidden spring of spring gushing forth a deluge of feelings that are difficult to articulate.
    The book, unlike many of the contemporaries that expose austerity of life under Red Horror, is shockingly realistic and yet not a tale of suffering, at least that is not what Gao intends it to be. The delineation is so genuine and faithful to the reckless truth and excruciatingly painful purging that only men in Gao's generation can identify with. The reality is almost too heartrending to bear, even in words: the acrimonious politics, the class struggles, and a society that is riddled with paranoia and fear under such taut repression and miasma.

    64. Article En Ligne, Book Reviews, Gao Xingjian, The Book Of A Man Alone
    In this sense, gao xingjian is closer to a Jorge Semprun. Could this represent the duty he feels to bear witness, rather than a need?
    http://www.cefc.com.hk/uk/pc/articles/art_ligne.php?num_art_ligne=3012

    65. Noël Dutrait (ed.): L'Ecriture Romanesque Et Théâtrale De Gao Xingjian.
    For example, while Pham Xuân Nguyên s article on gao xingjian in Vietnam praises gao for his refusal to subscribe to monological interpretations of
    http://chinaperspectives.revues.org/document1054.html
    Aller au contenu Aller au menu Recherche Perspectives chinoises ...
    september-october 2006
    Isabelle Rabut
    Paris: Le Seuil, 2006, 283 pp.
    Notes de la r©daction
    Translated by Jonathan Hall Notes de la r©daction Texte Citation Auteur ... Article suivant
    Texte int©gral
    The Bus Stop , translated by Dani¨le Turc-Crisa and published by Alin©a in the anthology entitled La Remont©e vers le Jour Some of the contributions tend simply to eulogise their subject, often with a barbed attack of the critics of the 2000 Nobel Laureate (Liu Zaifu, Chen Maiping and Torbj¶rn Lod©n). These contributions are of interest because they confirm the political significance of this distinction, but in some cases they betray a certain misapprehension of the literary situation in mainland China. For example, while Pham Xu¢n Nguyªn's article on "Gao Xingjian in Vietnam" praises Gao for his refusal to subscribe to monological interpretations of history, he appears to be unaware that since the 1980s many Chinese literary works have constantly questioned the official version. Snow in August zen or chan Soul Mountain and One Man’s Bible All these contributors focus, with good reason, on various aspects of Gao's writing and personality. First among these is Gao's insistence on individuality as a weapon of resistance, not only against power from above but also against that of the mass below, which is linked to the theme of retreat. Mabel Lee shows how the individual in Gao's works is the very antithesis of the Nietzschean superman model which, following the recent vagaries of the Cultural Revolution, is under critical attack. Sebastian Veg analyses the tension between marginality and the social dimension in Gao's early plays, and concludes that a permanent feature of his drama is his "ethical involvement with the world".

    66. The Case For Literature - Gao Xingjian; Lee, Mabel - Yale
    When gao xingjian was crowned Nobel Laureate in 2000, it was the first time in the hundredyear history of the Nobel Prize that this honor had been awarded
    http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300124217

    67. The Case For Literature - Gao Xingjian
    A review, and links to other information about and reviews of The Case for Literature by gao xingjian.
    http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/china/gaox.htm
    A
    Literary Saloon
    Site of Review.
    Trying to meet all your book preview and review needs.
    Contents: Main the Best the ... Links
    to e-mail us:
    support the site

    buy us books !
    Amazon wishlist

    the complete review - non-fiction
    The Case for Literature
    by Gao Xingjian general information review summaries our review links ... about the author Title: The Case for Literature Author: Gao Xingjian Genre: Non-fiction Written: (Eng. 2006) Length: 166 pages Original in: Chinese Availability: The Case for Literature - US The Case for Literature - UK The Case for Literature - Canada
    • Translated and with an Introduction by Mabel Lee
    • Essays and lectures originally published between 1990 and 2002
    - Return to top of the page - Our Assessment: B+ : interesting perspectives, useful introduction to his work See our review for fuller assessment. Review Summaries Source Rating Date Reviewer The Washington Post Michael Dirda From the Reviews
    • "That existential seriousness characterizes all the essays in The Case for Literature . For Gao, art is a matter of life and death, and he has nothing but scorn for commercialism and trendiness. (...) At once provocative and pontifical in themselves, the essays in The Case for Literature also provide a good overview of Gao Xingjian's career, especially when supplemented with the perspicacious "contextual" introduction by Gao's translator, Mabel Lee." -

    68. Dr Mabel Lee - Chinese Studies - The University Of Sydney
    Translation of Nobel Laureate gao xingjian’s book of essays Aesthetics and Creation. “Two Autobiographical Plays by gao xingjian”, in Gilbert C. F. Fong
    http://www.arts.usyd.edu.au/departs/chinese/staff/profiles/mabel_lee.shtml
    Department of Chinese Studies Home SLC Chinese Studies Staff / Academic staff USyd Faculty of Arts Quick Links About the Faculty of Arts Current students Future students Staff Departments Schools Research Alumni Contacts us University Library MyUni University phonebook META Centre
    • About Us
      Dr Mabel Lee
      BA Hons I, PhD (University of Sydney)
      Honorary Associate Professor
      mabel.lee[at]usyd.edu.au
      Research areas
      • Modern and contemporary Chinese literature and history
      Current projects
      • Aesthetics and Creation
      Back to Top
      Selected publications
      Translations
      Of Gao Xingjian
      • Soul Mountain (Sydney, London, New York: HarperCollins, 2000), 555 pp. (Sydney, London, New York: HarperCollins, 2002), 535 pp. Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather (Sydney, New York, London: HarperCollins, 2004), 165 pp. The Case for Literature (Sydney: HarperCollins, 2006, and Yale University Press, 2007), 178 pp.
      Book Chapters
      • (Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2007), pp. vii-xix. Between Figurative and Abstract: Paintings by Gao Xingjian (Notre Dame, Indiana: Snite Museum of Art, 2007), pp. 127-145.

    69. Review | Buying A Fishing Rod For My Grandfather: Stories By Gao Xingjian
    gao xingjian s international bestseller, Soul Mountain, helped secure the author his Nobel Prize for Literature. That book was an intimate epic.
    http://januarymagazine.com/fiction/buyingfishing.html
    Buying A Fishing Rod for My Grandfather: Stories by Gao Xingjian translated from the Chinese by Mabel Lee Published by HarperCollins 144 pages, 2004 A Patient Poetic Quest Continues Reviewed by Tim Keane Gao Xingjian's international bestseller, Soul Mountain , helped secure the author his Nobel Prize for Literature. That book was an intimate epic. In it he dramatized the difficulties which a secular pilgrim encounters as he investigates the ancient folk-histories and the messy contradictions of contemporary China, while his own past and his many lovers grow ever more estranged from him. In the author's new collection, Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather , Gao Xingjian continues his patient poetic quest, exploring through short stories and sketches how desires, daydreams and memories pass one into the other, not so much distracting from "reality" as positively transforming it. First published in magazines in China and France during the 1980s when the author still lived in Beijing, the stories are by turns erotic and thoughtful. In characteristic style, the writing unfolds slowly and luminously, revealing how we can start down the road to our truest selves by surrendering to the messy uncertainties we too easily think we've avoided. Like the expansive, ink-washed abstract paintings reproduced in his recently published monograph

    70. The Questia Online Library
    gao xingjian. Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather.
    http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&se=gglsc&d=5009738431

    71. JSTOR The Other Shore Plays By Gao Xingjian
    The Other Shore Plays by gao xingjian, translated by Gilbert C.F. Fong. Hong Kong The Chinese University Press, 1999. Pp. xlii + 269. US $18.00 (paper).
    http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0161-9705(200112)23<176:TOSPBG>2.0.CO;2-X

    72. Village Voice > Books > Gao Xingjian's Buying A Fishing Rod For My Grandfather B
    gao xingjian s Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather.
    http://www.villagevoice.com/books/0410,freeman,51638,10.html
    Sound of the City Saturday Friday Eat for Victory Friday La Daily Musto Friday Friday Threadster Thursday Bush Beat Thursday All City Tuesday more blogs La Dolce Musto
    The absolutely last word on words not to have lived by during the Status Ain't Hood
    Four Reasons Why 2008 Will Rule Cover Story
    On the Taco Trail
    Michael Alan's Draw-A-Thon (NSFW)

    Northern Chinese Dipping Paradise in Flushing

    by Robert Sietsema best of nyc
    eats

    drinks

    shopping
    ... Jesse James
    Enter to win a Jesse James DVD! Jalopy Enter to Win a Free $225 Series of Music Classes at Jalopy! Crunch Gym Membership Enter to win a 6-month membership to Crunch! Reverend Billy Enter To Win Tickets To See Reverend Billy's Hot + Holy Highline Revival! Books write to the editor email a friend print article comment Nobelist Gao abandons his characters in a tense present Gao Xingjian's Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather by John Freeman March 10 - 16, 2004 Chinese whispers: Gao Xingjian photo: HarperCollins Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather By Gao Xingjian HarperCollins, 125 pp.

    73. Ludwig Museum Koblenz - Contemporary French And International Art
    gao xingjian was born in 1940 in Ganzhu, eastern China. At the same time, gao xingjian is regarded as a sensitive painter using completely traditional
    http://www.ludwigmuseum.org/engl/exhibitions/retro_07/gao_07.htm
    Gao Xingjian - La fin du monde
    March 28 - May 27, 2007
    Gao Xingjian, La Fin du monde
    Chinese ink on canvas, 240 x 350 cm Gao Xingjian was born in 1940 in Ganzhu, eastern China. Until 1962 he studied French literature at the Institute of Foreign Languages in Beijing. In the course of the Cultural Revolution he was sent to the countryside for the purpose of “re-education”. In 1987 he finally left China and since then he has been living in Paris, becoming a French citizen in 1998. In 2000 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. To date he is not permitted to exhibit his works in China and also his literary works remain unnoticed. His latest book “One’s man bible”, 2004, is already now considered to be the central work of his literary output. At the same time, Gao Xingjian is regarded as a sensitive painter using completely traditional Chinese means, such as rice paper and Chinese ink, to produce abstract paintings, which in a broader sense remind of landscapes and inner worlds, as well as cosmic processes. Gao is able to model the ink by setting only a few highlights. The initial presentation of the new cycle “La Fin du Monde” is to be seen in the Ludwig Museum: 9 to some extent monumental pictures in ink. Important exhibitions in Europe and Asia (Taiwan, Indonesia, Hong Kong) underline his international appreciation.

    74. The Gao Xingjian Experience: A Personal Journey To The Infinite
    The gao xingjian Experience is the first retrospective art exhibition in Asia of the celebrated multifaceted writerpainter, gao xingjian,
    http://www.studio-international.co.uk/painting/xingjian.asp
    The Gao Xingjian Experience: A Personal Journey to the Infinite Singapore Art Museum
    17 November 2005-7 February 2006 Born in Ganzhou, Jiangxi, China, on 4 January 1940, Gao has survived turbulent changes that occurred in China during the mid-to-late 20th century, including the Japanese invasion of China, the Cultural Revolution, the trauma of a mistaken lung cancer diagnosis, and criticism from the Communist Party during its 'spiritual pollution' campaign. The latter marked the beginning of a self-imposed exile - a 15,000-kilometer journey from Beijing to Sichuan, following the Yangtze from its source to the coast, along the margins of mainstream society. It was a physical and spiritual journey for Gao, in search of the sacred mountain of Lingshan. His travels led him to a greater understanding of his trials, which he subsequently revealed in Soul Mountain , a haunting work of autobiographical fiction. Apparently, Gao's encounter in 1979 with the works of European master painters made him realize that he would not be able to surpass these masters in the medium of oil. Thus, he returned to the traditional medium of ink and brush, and pursued his interest in the speed of brush and ink on rice paper, and the potential to be found within the traditional art of Chinese ink painting. After Gao moved to Paris in 1987, Chinese ink painting became his main source of income and gave him the freedom to focus on creative writing. One may choose to view Gao's visual art with expectations based on familiarity with his written work, or to make connections with his literature and plays. In Gao's words, from

    75. Video Segolene - Entretien - Gao Xingjian - Gao, Xingjian, Ségolène, Royal
    Regarder Segolene Entretien - gao xingjian sur Dailymotion Partagez Vos Videos. Ségolène Royal entretien avec gao xingjian, prix Nobel de littérature
    http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xzo4q_segolene-entretien-gao-xingjian_news
    Upload Videos Login: Password:
    Remember me ? forgot your password? Create an account Login Videos ... My Channel Videos Users Groups More All groups Featured groups My groups ...
    most recent videos
    Segolene - Entretien - Gao Xingjian
    average rating: votes) votes ADD TO FAVORITES share this video add to blog add to playlist ... news Duration: 09:58 Taken: 15 January 2007 Location: Paris, France S©gol¨ne Royal : entretien avec Gao Xingjian, prix Nobel de litt©rature 2000.
    Le 14 janvier 2007. Permalink: Embeddable Player: player size: small medium large Preview display related videos : yes no
    Comments are deactivated for this video. a d v e r t i s i n g mcType = "video_player"; mcContainer = "Middle"; Try our Beta videoplayer
    video info
    add to my channel posted 13 months ago by offline vid. fans friends rate this video : related member groups playlist ... Prohibited content Tools NEW! VideoWall Jukebox Uploader Content Become a MotionMaker Our MotionMakers Become an Official User Our Official Users Videos Users Groups United States Dailymotion is available in 19 countries

    76. Gao Xing-Jian
    The first Chinese writer won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2000.
    http://chineseculture.about.com/cs/gaoxingjian/
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') You are here: About Chinese Culture Chinese Culture Chinese Culture ... Help Gao Xing-Jian
    Guide picks The first Chinese writer won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2000.
    Gao Xingjian

    A short bio about him. Gao Xingjian
    About the playwright, author and painter. The Other Shore
    Introduction to the book by Gao Xingjian. Chinese Water Torture
    A book review about Soul Mountain. Gao Xinjian
    In French. Works by Gao Xingjian
    A few paintings by Gao Xingjian. Chinese Novelist Wins Nobel Literature Prize
    A report from CNN. Chinese Public Surprised by Nobel Prize
    Discussion about Gao Xingjian.
    Loving Las Vegas The Best Vegas Events Healthy Eats in Vegas Vegas Outlet Shopping Visiting Hoover Dam ... Renting Cars in Town What's Hot Chinese Characters for girl Chinese Characters for soldier learn... Chinese Name Wendy Chinese Name Stacey ... The New York Times Company var tcdacmd="dt;da";

    77. Gao Xing Jian At Alisan
    Alisan Fine Arts was founded in 1981 and was the first professionally run gallery in Hong Kong.
    http://www.alisan.com.hk/Gao_Xing_Jian.html
    Luminosity
    Chinese ink on paper 71 x 86 cm / 27.7 x 33.5 ins
    Click to enlarge The Quest 2002
    Chinese ink on paper 117.5 x 122 cm / 45.8 x 47.6 ins
    Click to enlarge Snowy weather 2001
    Chinese ink on paper 82 x 81 cm / 32 x 31.6 ins
    Click to enlarge Ouside 2000
    Chinese ink on paper 72.5 x 82 cm / 28.3 x 32 ins
    Click to enlarge Fog 2001
    Chinese ink on paper 61.5 x 69.5 cm / 24 x 27.1 ins
    Click to enlarge Your Privacy At Alisan, we take your privacy concern seriously. Data of privacy nature are information that can help identify a person like your name and mailing address. Alisan.com.hk collects and uses such personally identifiable data for the workings of the site only and will not sell, rent, trade or disclose such data to anyone, except when required by law. Alisan also uses cookies , a small record generated by your browser only to facilitate and to remember your ordering selection. They will delete themselves when you place the order or after hours if left unattended. Kindly check back to this policy page often as we add new services and facilities to the site but all such additions or changes will always reflect our policy of using customers' data for our site's purposes only.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 4     61-77 of 77    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4 

    free hit counter