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         Gao Xingjian:     more books (105)
  1. Soul Mountain by Gao Xingjian, 2001-11-01
  2. One Man's Bible by Gao Xingjian, 2003-09
  3. Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather: Stories by Gao Xingjian, 2005-01-01
  4. The Other Shore by Gao Xingjian, Gilbert C. F. Fong, 2001-01
  5. Ling shan ('Soul Mountain' in Traditional Chinese Characters) by Xingjian Gao, 1990-12
  6. Return to Painting by Gao Xingjian, 2002-09-01
  7. The Case for Literature by Xingjian Gao, 2008-05-20
  8. Escape and The Man Who Questions Death: Two Plays by Gao Xingjian by Gao Xingjian, Gilbert C. F. Fong, 2007-03-01
  9. Cold Literature: Selected Works by Gao Xingjian (Bilingual Series on Modern Chinese Literature) by Gao Xingjian, Gilbert C. F. Fong, 2005-07-30
  10. Ink Paintings by Gao Xingjian: The Nobel Prize Winner by Xingjian Gao, 2002-08-25
  11. Soul of Chaos: Critical Perspectives on Gao Xingjian
  12. Snow in August: Play by Gao Xingjian by Gao Xingjian, 2004-09-30
  13. Ink Dances in Limbo: Gao Xingjian's Writing As Cultural Translation by Jessica Yeung, 2009-02-28
  14. Gao Xingjian's Idea of Theatre: From the Word to the Image (Sinica Leidensia) by Izabella Labedzka, 2008-08-15

1. 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
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2. 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.

    3. The Other Shore
    Brief information on the book and author.
    http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/cupress/html/literature/Other Shore.html
    229x152 mm
    312 pages
    Paperback
    US$21 The Other Shore: Plays by Gao Xingjian
    Translated by Gilbert C. F. Fong
    About the Book
    Gao Xingjian is the leading Chinese dramatist of our time. He is also one of the most moving and literary writers for the contemporary stage. His plays have been performed all around the world, including China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, Australia, the Ivory Coast, the United States, France, Germany and other European countries. Born and educated in China, Gao studied French literature at the Beijing Foreign Languages Institute between 1957-1962. After the Cultural Revolution, he became a resident playwright at the Beijing People's Art Theatre. His works, including Bus Stop Absolute Signal , and Wilderness Man , were trend-setting and have created many controversies and a wave of experimental drama in China. In 1987 he settled in Paris, France and continued to write in Chinese and in French. He was awarded the Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Government in 1992.

    4. Gao Xingjian
    Biograf­a y fragmento de La monta±a del alma .
    http://www.epdlp.com/escritor.php?id=2449

    5. Literature 2000
    gao xingjian. gao xingjian. France. b. 1940 (in Ganzhou, China) Prize Announcement Press Release Presentation Speech gao xingjian Biography
    http://nobelprize.org/literature/laureates/2000/
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    The Nobel Prize in Literature 2000
    "for an œuvre of universal validity, bitter insights and linguistic ingenuity, which has opened new paths for the Chinese novel and drama" Gao Xingjian France b. 1940
    (in Ganzhou, China) The Nobel Prize in Literature 2000
    Prize Announcement

    Press Release

    Presentation Speech
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    The 2000 Prize in:
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    Find a Laureate: Nobelprize.org Get to know all 770 Prize Winners! » Games and Simulations » SITE FEEDBACK ... TELL A FRIEND Last modified April 13, 2005

    6. Gao Xingjian
    Notes by the Swedish Academy.
    http://nobel.sdsc.edu/literature/laureates/2000/index.html

    7. Literature 2000
    gao xingjian. France b. 1940 (in Ganzhou, China) The Nobel Prize in Literature 2000 Prize Announcement Press Release Presentation Speech
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    8. Gao Xingjian - Bio-bibliography
    gao xingjian, born January 4, 1940 in Ganzhou (Jiangxi province) in eastern China, gao xingjian grew up during the aftermath of the Japanese invasion,
    http://nobelprize.org/literature/laureates/2000/gao-bibl.html
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    Swedish
    English French German
    Biobibliographical notes Gao Xingjian Premier essai sur les techniques du roman moderne / A Preliminary Discussion of the Art of Modern Fiction A Pigeon Called Red Beak Collected Plays (1985) and In Search of a Modern Form of Dramatic Representation (1987). Several of his experimental and pioneering plays - inspired in part by Brecht, Artaud and Beckett - were produced at the Theatre of Popular Art in Beijing: his theatrical debut with (1982) was a tempestuous success, and the absurd drama which established his reputation (1985) also gave rise to heated domestic polemic and international attention.
    In 1986 was banned and since then none of his plays have been performed in China. In order to avoid harassment he undertook a ten-month walking-tour of the forest and mountain regions of Sichuan Province, tracing the course of the Yangzi river from its source to the coast. In 1987 he left China and settled down a year later in Paris as a political refugee. After the massacre on the Square of Heavenly Peace in 1989 he left the Chinese Communist Party. After publication of La fuite / Fugitives , which takes place against the background of this massacre, he was declared persona non grata by the regime and his works were banned. In the summer of 1982, Gao Xingjian had already started working on his prodigious novel

    9. Gao Xingjian - Bio-bibliography
    gao xingjian Bio-bibliography. Swedish English. French. German
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    10. Gao Xingjian - Biobibliographische Notiz
    Biobibliographische Notiz der Schwedischen Akademie f¼r den Literaturnobelpreistr¤ger 2000.
    http://nobelprize.org/literature/laureates/2000/gao-bibl-d.html
    HOME SITE HELP ABOUT SEARCH ... French German
    Biobibliographische Notiz Gao Xingjian Premier essai sur les techniques du roman moderne/A Preliminary Discussion of the Art of Modern Fiction A Pigeon Called Red Beak Collected Plays (1985) und In Search of a Modern Form of Dramatic Representation (1985) rief eine hitzige einheimische Debatte hervor und verursachte international Aufsehen.
    1986 wurde das Drama La fuite/Fugitives/Die Flucht Ein Sommerregen in Peking, Die Flucht
    Le somnambule
    Werke von Gao Xingjian auf deutsch Nächtliche Wanderung : Reflektionen über das Theater Was hat uns das Exil gebracht? : ein Gespräch zwischen Gao Xingjian und Yang Lian über chinesische Literatur Auf dem Meer : Erzählungen Der Berg der Seele Das Buch eines einsamen Menschen : Roman Literatur Trees on the Mountain : an Anthology of New Chinese Writing Gao Xingjian, le moderniste Basting, Monica, World Literature with Chinese Characteristics : On a Novel by Gao Xingjian // Stockholm Journal of East Asian Studies 4, 1993. Lee, Gregory B.

    11. Chayanne
    Official site that includes biography, discography, pictures, sound files, videos and news.
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    12. Gao Xingjian
    gao xingjian was born in Ganzhou (Jiangxi province) in eastern China. After surviving cadre school gao xingjian worked as a translator in the Chinese
    http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/gao.htm
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    B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Gao Xingjian (1940- ) Chinese novelist, translator, dramatist, director, critic and artist, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 2000. His controversial plays combine elements from ancient masked drama with influences from Western modernism, represented by such writers as Artaud, Brecht and Beckett. Gao Xingjian's career as a writer was stopped in China when he wrote a play set against the background of the Tiananmen Square massacre. From the late 1980s Gao Xingjian has lived in France. He holds French citizenship and writes as fluently in French as in Chinese. "From my experience in writing, I can say that literature is inherently man's affirmation of the value of his own self and that this is validated during the writing, literature is born primarily of the writer's need for self-fulfilment. Whether it has any impact on society comes after the completion of a work and that impact certainly is not determined by the wishes of the writer." (from the Nobel lecture After surviving cadre school Gao Xingjian worked as a translator in the Chinese Writers Association. He became a resident playwright at the People's Art Theatre in Beijing and in 1978 he published his first novella. The first opportunity to travel abroad opened for him in 1979 and he visited France and Italy. In the same year his first works appeared. Between the years 1980 and 1987 Gao Xingjian produced a prolifical stream of short stories, essays and plays. The publication of

    13. Official Website Of Mike Weir - Splash
    Official site, with a biography, news and tournament coverage, multimedia content and interactive fan features.
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    14. 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://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    15. 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:

    16. Gao Xingjian
    gao xingjian 1940 Winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2000, Gao introduced avant-garde ideas from European theatre, as well as the Theatre
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    17. Gao Xingjian
    gao xingjian The Nobel Prize in Literature. Nobel Lecture, Biography, Lists of Works by gao xingjian, Nobel Laureates.
    http://www.literature-awards.com/nobelprize_winners/gao_xingjian.htm
    This site is for sale contact 1-904-260-7599
    Gao Xingjian
    Nobel Prize for Literature 2000 Nobel Lecture His Works in Translation Ink Paintings by Gao Xingjian: The Nobel Prize Winner Hardcover Gao Xingjian , born January 4, 1940 in Ganzhou (Jiangxi province) in eastern China, is today a French citizen. Writer of prose, translator, dramatist, director, critic and artist. Gao Xingjian grew up during the aftermath of the Japanese invasion, his father was a bank official and his mother an amateur actress who stimulated the young Gao’s interest in the theatre and writing. He received his basic education in the schools of the People’s Republic and took a degree in French in 1962 at the Department of Foreign Languages in Beijing. During the Cultural Revolution (1966–76) he was sent to a re-education camp and felt it necessary to burn a suitcase full of manuscripts. Not until 1979 could he publish his work and travel abroad, to France and Italy. During the period 1980–87 he published short stories, essays and dramas in literary magazines in China and also four books: A Preliminary Discussion of the Art of Modern Fiction (1981) which gave rise to a violent polemic on “modernism”, the narrative

    18. "Der Wert Der Kunst Liegt Jenseits Des Verkaufspreises.". (druckbare Version)
    Bericht ¼ber den LiteraturNobelpreistr¤ger gao xingjian. Dagmar Lorenz in MorgenWelt Kultur.
    http://www.morgenwelt.de/kultur/001013-gao.htm
    Dies ist ein Beitrag aus dem Morgenwelt-Archiv in Druckversion. Zur aktuellen Ausgabe kommen Sie hier: www.morgenwelt.de! Morgenwelt
    13. Oktober 2000
    "Der Wert der Kunst liegt jenseits des Verkaufspreises."
    von Dagmar Lorenz Auf die Machthaber in Peking jedoch, muss die Entscheidung des Nobelpreiskomitees wie eine Ohrfeige gewirkt haben. Da wurde - im Grunde heiß ersehnt - zum ersten Male endlich einmal einem chinesischen Schriftsteller die Ehre des Nobelpreises zuteil - und nun ist es nicht nur ein Renegat, der vor Jahren freiwillig der Kommunistischen Partei Chinas den Rücken gekehrt hat, sondern noch dazu ein Exilant, der inzwischen gar die französische Staatsbürgerschaft angenommen hat - und somit auch weniger regimetreuen Chinesen "verdächtig" sein dürfte. In der Tat ist der im Pariser Exilantenmilieu lebende Gao Xingjian eine durchaus auch unter oppositionellen Chinesen nicht unumstrittene Figur. Während der Jahre 1980-1987 veröffentlichte er in China Texte in literarischen Zeitschriften. Es erschienen die ersten Bücher: eine Betrachtung über den modernen Roman (1981), das Auseinandersetzungen mit der offiziellen Literaturkritik über den "Modernismus" hervorrief, eine Erzählung, mehrere Theaterstücke und eine theoretische Arbeit über das Drama. Mehrere seiner teilweise von Artaud und Beckett inspirierten Dramen wurden in Peking aufgeführt, darunter seine erfolgreichsten Stücke "Alarmsignal" (1982) und "Die Busstation" (1983, ins Deutsche übersetzt und bei Brockmeyer/Bochum erschienen: 1988) - ein Drama, das übrigens bei einer Kampagne der Parteigewaltigen als Negativbeispiel für "geistige Verschmutzung" herhalten musste.

    19. Mabel LEE Author's Profile Mabel Lee Works In Chinese Studies
    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
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    20. Gao Xingjian Nobel Lecture
    gao xingjian Nobel Lecture 2000 Nobel Prize in Literature. Biography, Lists of Works by gao xingjian, Nobel Laureates.
    http://www.literature-awards.com/nobelprize_winners/gao_xingjian_the_nobel_laure
    This site is for sale contact 1-904-260-7599
    Gao Xingjian
    Biography Works in Translation Nobel Laureates Nobel Lecture "The Case for Literature" I have no way of knowing whether it was fate that has pushed me onto this dais but as various lucky coincidences have created this opportunity I may as well call it fate. Putting aside discussion of the existence or non-existence of God, I would like to say that despite my being an atheist I have always shown reverence for the unknowable. A person cannot be God, certainly not replace God, and rule the world as a Superman; he will only succeed in creating more chaos and make a greater mess of the world. In the century after Nietzsche man-made disasters left the blackest records in the history of humankind. Supermen of all types called leader of the people, head of the nation and commander of the race did not baulk at resorting to various violent means in perpetrating crimes that in no way resemble the ravings of a very egotistic philosopher. However, I do not wish to waste this talk on literature by saying too much about politics and history, what I want to do is to use this opportunity to speak as one writer in the voice of an individual.
    A writer is an ordinary person, perhaps he is more sensitive but people who are highly sensitive are often more frail. A writer does not speak as the spokesperson of the people or as the embodiment of righteousness. His voice is inevitably weak but it is precisely this voice of the individual that is more authentic.

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