Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
CommonWealth Magazine was founded by Yin Yu-peng , Charles Kao , and Wang Lixing in 1981, following the United States' de-recognition of Taiwan and the severance of diplomatic relations. [1] Yin decided to establish a news magazine to address Taiwan's international information deficit.
A Taiwanese magazine is a periodical publication from Taiwan containing a variety of articles on various subjects. See also: Category:Newspapers published in Taiwan Subcategories
The magazine was founded as Sinorama Magazine in January 1976, and was published by the Government Information Office.In 2006, it was renamed as Taiwan Panorama. [4] [5]In 2015, the magazine, originally published by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Chinese, English and Japanese, also began to be published in Vietnamese, Thai, and Bahasa Indonesia. [4]
Get lifestyle news, with the latest style articles, fashion news, recipes, home features, videos and much more for your daily life from AOL.
Rhythms Monthly (Chinese: 經典雜誌; pinyin: Jīngdiǎn Zázhì) is a Chinese language geographic magazine based in Taipei, Taiwan.Published in a format similar to the National Geographic Magazine, Rhythms Monthly reports on cultural, historical, environmental and humanitarian themes, often from and for a Chinese perspective.
The Taipei Chinese PEN: A Quarterly Journal of Contemporary Chinese Literature from Taiwan (當代台灣文學英譯 or 當代台灣文學選譯), known as The Chinese PEN before 2007, is a quarterly English-language literary magazine on contemporary Taiwanese literature.
This Month in Taiwan, founded by E. Kirk Henderson and first published in 1974, is the most widely distributed tourism magazine in Taiwan, with an annual estimated circulation of 200,000 copies. The publishers authorizes advertisers or their agents to physically count and verify the quantity of magazines published at its printing plant at any time.
In an effort to curb dissent, KMT promulgated the Enforcement Rules for the Publications Act in 1952, which effectively banned the establishment of any more new magazines, newspapers and news agencies during Taiwan's martial law era (1949–1987). [4] From 1952 to 1987, there were 31 newspapers in Taiwan, and by 1974, 44 news agencies. [5]