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  2. The Taipei Chinese PEN (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Taipei_Chinese_PEN...

    The journal was founded by Nancy Ing in 1972, and published by the Taipei Chinese P.E.N. Center (Chinese P.E.N. Center from 1924 to 1975), one of the PEN International centers. The magazine is supported by Taiwan's Ministry of Culture , Ministry of Foreign Affairs , the National Museum of Taiwan Literature , and Hao Ran Foundation.

  3. Taiwanese literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiwanese_Literature

    National Museum of Taiwanese Literature; On-line Alliance of Taiwan's Modern Poetry 臺灣現代詩網路聯盟 (in Chinese characters) Taiwan Fiction in Translation; Taiwanese Literature (gio.gov.tw) Taiwan Literature - English Translation Series (journal) Taiwan Xiangtu (Hsiangtu) Wenxue (Taiwan Nativist Literature): the Sojourner-Narrator

  4. Taipei People - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taipei_People

    The stories in Taipei People vary in length and writing style, all focusing on characters and their lives after leaving China for Taiwan in the 1950s. The collection includes 14 stories: "The Eternal Snow Beauty" (永遠的尹雪豔), "A Touch of Green" (一把青), "New Year's Eve" (歲除), "The Last Night of Taipan Chin" (金大班的最後一夜), "A Sea of Blood-red Azaleas ...

  5. East Asian literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Asian_literature

    East Asian literature is the diverse writings from the East Asian nations, China, Japan, Korea, Mongolia and Taiwan. Literature from this area emerges as a distinct and unique field of prose and poetry that embodies the cultural, social and political factors of each nation.

  6. List of Taiwanese writers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Taiwanese_writers

    National Museum of Taiwanese Literature; On-line Alliance of Taiwan's Modern Poetry 臺灣現代詩網路聯盟 (in Chinese characters) Taiwan Fiction in Translation; Taiwanese Literature (gio.gov.tw) Taiwan Literature - English Translation Series (journal) Taiwan Xiangtu (Hsiangtu) Wenxue (Taiwan Nativist Literature): the Sojourner-Narrator

  7. Shiatzy Chen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiatzy_Chen

    Shiatzy Chen (Chinese: 夏姿.陳; pinyin: Xiàzī Chén) is a Taiwanese luxury fashion house founded in 1978 by Wang Chen Tsai-Hsia (王陳彩霞) and her husband Wang Yuan-Hong. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Its style is described as "neo-Chinese chic", combining the aesthetics of Chinese clothing and handicraft with Western styles.

  8. Hanfu Movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanfu_Movement

    Eric Fish, a freelance writer who lived in China from 2007 to 2014 as a teacher, student, and journalist, believes that the Hanfu Movement does have "patriotic undertones" but "most Hanfu enthusiasts are in it for the fashion and community more than a racial or xenophobic motivation" and that contrary to popular belief, China's "young people ...

  9. Chiung Yao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiung_Yao

    Chen Che was born in Chengdu, Republic of China, on 20 April 1938. [9] [10] She experienced an unstable childhood due to the Second Sino-Japanese War. [11]Her father, Chen Chih-ping [], came from a humble background in Hengyang, while her mother, Yuan Xingshu, belonged to an upper-class family in Suzhou and Shanghai; her grandfather was the head of the Bank of Communications.