Winners of 2016 Intel Cup Embedded System Design Invitational Contest No
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Anarchism in the Chinese Revolution Was Also a Radical Educational Institution Modeled After Socialist 1991 36 for This Information, See Ibid., 58
only by rephrasing earlier problems in a new discourse that is unmistakably modern in its premises and sensibilities; even where the answers are old, the questions that produced them have been phrased in the problematic of a new historical situation. The problem was especially acute for the first generation of intellec- Anarchism in the Chinese tuals to become conscious of this new historical situation, who, Revolution as products of a received ethos, had to remake themselves in the very process of reconstituting the problematic of Chinese thought. Anarchism, as we shall see, was a product of this situation. The answers it offered to this new problematic were not just social Arif Dirlik and political but sought to confront in novel ways its demands in their existential totality. At the same time, especially in the case of the first generation of anarchists, these answers were couched in a moral language that rephrased received ethical concepts in a new discourse of modernity. Although this new intellectual problematique is not to be reduced to the problem of national consciousness, that problem was important in its formulation, in two ways. First, essential to the new problematic is the question of China’s place in the world and its relationship to the past, which found expression most concretely in problems created by the new national consciousness. Second, national consciousness raised questions about social relationships, ultimately at the level of the relationship between the individual and society, which were to provide the framework for, and in some ways also contained, the redefinition of even existential questions. -
Anarchism in the Chinese Revolution
the only proper object of revolutionary discourse. In doing so, anarchists opened up a perspective on revolution that was foreclosed by the political and suppressed even in the think- ing of revolutionaries, who insisted on a social revolution but could not conceive of the social apart from the political tasks Anarchism in the Chinese of revolution. To affirm the fundamental significance of anar- Revolution chism in revolutionary discourse is not to privilege anarchism per se, but to reaffirm the indispensability of an antipolitical conception of society in raising fundamental questions about the nature of domination and oppression, which are otherwise Arif Dirlik excluded from both the analysis of ideology and historical anal- ysis in general. In declaring politics—all politics, including rev- olutionary politics—to be inimical to the cause of an authen- tic social revolution, anarchists pointed to the politicization of the social as an ideological closure that not only disguised the fact that revolutionary hegemony itself presupposed a struc- ture of authority that contradicted its own goals, but also cov- ered up areas of social oppression that were not immediately visible in the realm of politics (the family and gender oppres- sion were their primary concerns). More fundamental anar- chists explained that the revolutionary urge to restore politi- cal order was a consequence of the naturalization of politics— the inability, therefore, to imagine society without politics—as one of the most deeply ingrained ideological habits that per- petuated relations of domination in society. The explanation moved them past the realm of ideology to the realm of social discourses as the location for habits of authority and submis- sion that sustained both political and social oppression. -
December 1998
JANUARY - DECEMBER 1998 SOURCE OF REPORT DATE PLACE NAME ALLEGED DS EX 2y OTHER INFORMATION CRIME Hubei Daily (?) 16/02/98 04/01/98 Xiangfan C Si Liyong (34 yrs) E 1 Sentenced to death by the Xiangfan City Hubei P Intermediate People’s Court for the embezzlement of 1,700,00 Yuan (US$20,481,9). Yunnan Police news 06/01/98 Chongqing M Zhang Weijin M 1 1 Sentenced by Chongqing No. 1 Intermediate 31/03/98 People’s Court. It was reported that Zhang Sichuan Legal News Weijin murdered his wife’s lover and one of 08/05/98 the lover’s relatives. Shenzhen Legal Daily 07/01/98 Taizhou C Zhang Yu (25 yrs, teacher) M 1 Zhang Yu was convicted of the murder of his 01/01/99 Zhejiang P girlfriend by the Taizhou City Intermediate People’s Court. It was reported that he had planned to kill both himself and his girlfriend but that the police had intervened before he could kill himself. Law Periodical 19/03/98 07/01/98 Harbin C Jing Anyi (52 yrs, retired F 1 He was reported to have defrauded some 2600 Liaoshen Evening News or 08/01/98 Heilongjiang P teacher) people out of 39 million Yuan 16/03/98 (US$4,698,795), in that he loaned money at Police Weekend News high rates of interest (20%-60% per annum). 09/07/98 Southern Daily 09/01/98 08/01/98 Puning C Shen Guangyu D, G 1 1 Convicted of the murder of three children - Guangdong P Lin Leshan (f) M 1 1 reported to have put rat poison in sugar and 8 unnamed Us 8 8 oatmeal and fed it to the three children of a man with whom she had a property dispute. -
Vol. 14, Spring 2000, No. 1 Judicial Psychiatry in China
COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF ASIAN LAW VOL. 14, SPRING 2000, NO. 1 JUDICIAL PSYCHIATRY IN CHINA AND ITS POLITICAL ABUSES * ROBIN MUNRO I. INTRODUCTION.........................................................................................................................1 II. INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS ON ETHICAL PSYCHIATRY.......................................6 III. HISTORICAL OVERVIEW ..................................................................................................10 A. LAW AND PSYCHIATRY PRIOR TO 1949 .......................................................................10 B. THE EARLY YEARS OF THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC ..........................................................13 C. THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION .....................................................................................22 D. PSYCHIATRIC ABUSE IN THE POST-MAO ERA ..............................................................34 IV. A SHORT GUIDE TO POLITICAL PSYCHOSIS ...............................................................38 A. MANIFESTATIONS OF COUNTERREVOLUTIONARY BEHAVIOR BY THE MENTALLY ILL ...38 B. WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A PARANOIAC AND A POLITICAL DISSIDENT?......40 V. THE LEGAL CONTEXT.......................................................................................................42 A. LEGAL NORMS AND JUDICIAL PROCESS.......................................................................42 B. COUNTERREVOLUTIONARY CRIMES IN CHINA .............................................................50 VI. THE ANKANG: CHINA’S SPECIAL PSYCHIATRIC -
UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT Southern District of New York *SUBJECT to GENERAL and SPECIFIC NOTES to THESE SCHEDULES* SUMMARY
UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT Southern District of New York Refco Capital Markets, LTD Case Number: 05-60018 *SUBJECT TO GENERAL AND SPECIFIC NOTES TO THESE SCHEDULES* SUMMARY OF AMENDED SCHEDULES An asterisk (*) found in schedules herein indicates a change from the Debtor's original Schedules of Assets and Liabilities filed December 30, 2005. Any such change will also be indicated in the "Amended" column of the summary schedules with an "X". Indicate as to each schedule whether that schedule is attached and state the number of pages in each. Report the totals from Schedules A, B, C, D, E, F, I, and J in the boxes provided. Add the amounts from Schedules A and B to determine the total amount of the debtor's assets. Add the amounts from Schedules D, E, and F to determine the total amount of the debtor's liabilities. AMOUNTS SCHEDULED NAME OF SCHEDULE ATTACHED NO. OF SHEETS ASSETS LIABILITIES OTHER YES / NO A - REAL PROPERTY NO 0 $0 B - PERSONAL PROPERTY YES 30 $6,002,376,477 C - PROPERTY CLAIMED AS EXEMPT NO 0 D - CREDITORS HOLDING SECURED CLAIMS YES 2 $79,537,542 E - CREDITORS HOLDING UNSECURED YES 2 $0 PRIORITY CLAIMS F - CREDITORS HOLDING UNSECURED NON- YES 356 $5,366,962,476 PRIORITY CLAIMS G - EXECUTORY CONTRACTS AND UNEXPIRED YES 2 LEASES H - CODEBTORS YES 1 I - CURRENT INCOME OF INDIVIDUAL NO 0 N/A DEBTOR(S) J - CURRENT EXPENDITURES OF INDIVIDUAL NO 0 N/A DEBTOR(S) Total number of sheets of all Schedules 393 Total Assets > $6,002,376,477 $5,446,500,018 Total Liabilities > UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT Southern District of New York Refco Capital Markets, LTD Case Number: 05-60018 GENERAL NOTES PERTAINING TO SCHEDULES AND STATEMENTS FOR ALL DEBTORS On October 17, 2005 (the “Petition Date”), Refco Inc. -
5. Seizing the Power of Ideological “Interpretation”
5. Seizing the Power of Ideological “Interpretation” Materials I. What Did Mao Learn from Stalin’s History of the CPSU? Four years of concerted efforts from 1935 to 1938, Copyrighted with many complications and temporary setbacks along the way,: finally brought Mao on a triumphant march toward realizing his political ideals. By the end of 1938, Mao had control of the Party and thePress Communist armed forces firmly within his grasp, but one matter continued to rankle him—he had yet to seize the power of ideological interpretation. The power of interpretation—theUniversity power to define terminology— is one of the greatest powers available to human beings. Within the Communist Party, the power of interpretation was especially important; whoever was empoweredChinese to interpret the classic texts of Marxism- Leninism controlled the Party’s consciousness. In other words, control over the militaryThe and the Party had to be sustained through the power of ideological interpretation. The importance of interpretation lay not only in the content and the meaning of words and expressions, but even more importantly in integrating these terms with reality, and in the role these terms and concepts played in social existence. Under the long-term management by the Soviet faction, Russified concepts had shrouded the Party in a special spiritual climate and a richly pro-Soviet atmosphere that seriously hindered innovation. In this environment, Wang Ming, Zhang Wentian, and the others in the Soviet faction not only rose to the top but also complacently presented themselves as the bearers of the Holy Grail and lorded themselves over others as the great masters and defenders of the faith, dismissing all innovative thinking as heterodoxy to be eliminated 198 | HOW THE RED SUN ROSE at first instance. -
CHINESE GLOSSARY an Bai Ju Yi Bao Pu Zi
CHINESE GLOSSARY an Bai Ju Yi Bao Pu Zi - Nei Pian Bao Shu Ya ba yu jiao yang Bei Ji Qian Jin Yao Fang Beijing ben cao Ben Cao Gang Mu Ben Cao Shi Yi bi guan bian tong bie Bo Yi bu yi cang chang sheng bu si Chen Cang Qi Chen Cun Chen Guang Lei Chen Liang Chen Liang Ji Chen Qian Chu Xian Sheng Mu Zhi Ming Chen Que Chen Tian Hua Cheng Cheng-Chung Shu Chu Cheng Hao Cheng I Cheng Shu De Ruiping Fan (ed.), Confucian Bioethics, 285-291. © 1999 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in Great Britain. 286 CHINESE GLOSSARY Cheng Ying Cheng-Zhu Chou Fu Chu Chu Ci Ji Zhu Chuang Tzu (Zhuang Zi) Chuang Tzu (Zhuang Zi) Chun Qiu Fan Lu Chun Qiu Fan Lu -Xun Tian Zhi Dao ci Da Kuang Da Qing Lu Li - Ming Li da ti da tong Da Xue Da Zheng Xin Xiu Da Zang Jing dao (tao) dao bu yuan ren dao jia dao li dao xue dao yi de de xing Diao Qu Yuan Fu dong Dong Zhong Shu Du Si Shu Da Chuan Shuo DuanWu Du Shu Er Ya fan guan CHINESE GLOSSARY 287 Fan Li Sao feng, han, shu, shi, zao, huo Fu Lei fu zuo Fun You-lan Gao Seng Zhuan Ge Hong ge wu, zhi zhi, cheng yi, zheng xin, xiu shen, qi jia, zhi guo, ping tian xia Gong Ting Xian gu dai zhong guo ren de jia zhi guan: Jia zhi qu xiang de chong tu ji qi jie xiao Gu Yan Wu Gu Zhu guan xing Guan Yu Guan Zhong Guan Zi Guan Zi - Nei Ye Pian gui shen Guo Dai Dong Han Han Xue Yan Jiu Zhong Xin Han Yu he He Xian Ming Hua Shan Wen Yi Hua Wen Shu Ju Hua Zhong Li Gong Da Xue Huang Di Nei Jing Su Wen Huang Jun Jie Huang Ru Cheng Huang Zhong Mo 288 CHINESE GLOSSARY Huang Zi Ping Huang Zong Xi jen (ren) Jia Yi Jiao Xun jie cao jie lie jinga -
The Transformation and Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage of China a Case Study of Huanxian Daoqing Shadow Theatre
From “Feudal Rubbish” to “National Treasure”: The Transformation and Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage of China A Case Study of Huanxian Daoqing Shadow Theatre A thesis approved by the Faculty of Mechanical, Electrical and Industrial Engineering at the Brandenburg University of Technology in Cottbus in partial fulfilment of the requirement for the award of the academic degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Heritage Studies by Chang Liu, M.A. from Beijing, China First Examiner: Prof. Dr. Marie-Theres Albert Second Examiner: Prof. Dr. Klaus Mühlhahn Day of the oral examination: 09 May 2014 ABSTRACT This study examines the history of the transformation of the intangible cultural heritage of China and the efforts to safeguard it, using the case study of Huanxian Daoqing shadow theatre. A regional style of Chinese shadow theatre, Daoqing has undergone dramatic transformation from 1949 to 2013, from being labeled in socialist China as a form of “feudal rubbish” to be eradicated, to being safeguarded as “national treasure”. The changes in Daoqing’s social identity, function, value, interpretation, transmission and safeguarding efforts can be observed in the discourses of both the authorities and the practicing community. These changes may be understood as part of three different stages in the political and economic transformation of socialist China. The researcher has collected governmental archives and conducted semi-structured interviews with Daoqing inheritors in an interpretative phenomenological analysis approach. This thesis analyses how, following Hobsbawm’s argument, Daoqing as an intangible cultural heritage involves an “invention of tradition” through joint actions of the Chinese government and the Huanxian community. -
INFORMATION to USERS This Manuscript Has Been Reproduced
INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI film s the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely afreet reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6” x 9" black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. UMI University Microfilms international A Bell & Howell Information C om pany 300 Nortfi Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor. Ml 48106-1346 USA 313/761-4700 800/521-0600 Order Number 9201707 Nouns, nominalization and denominalization in Classical Chinese: A study based onMencius and Zuozhuan Liu, Cheng-Hui, Ph.D. -
Competing Narratives of Female Martyrdom
FLESH AND STONE: COMPETING NARRATIVES OF FEMALE MARTYRDOM FROM LATE IMPERIAL TO CONTEMPORARY CHINA by XIAN WANG A DISSERTATION Presented to the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures and the Graduate School of the University of Oregon in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy March 2018 DISSERTATION APPROVAL PAGE Student: Xian Wang Title: Flesh and Stone: Competing Narratives of Female Martyrdom from Late Imperial to Contemporary China This dissertation has been accepted and approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures by: Maram Epstein Chairperson Wendy Larson Core Member Roy Chan Core Member Bryna Goodman Institutional Representative and Sara D. Hodges Interim Vice Provost and Dean of the Graduate School Original approval signatures are on file with the University of Oregon Graduate School. Degree awarded March 2018 ii © 2018 Xian Wang iii DISSERTATION ABSTRACT Xian Wang Doctor of Philosophy Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures March 2018 Title: Flesh and Stone: Competing Narratives of Female Martyrdom from Late Imperial to Contemporary China My dissertation focuses on the making of Chinese female martyrs to explore how representations serve as a strategy to either justify or question the normalization of the horrors of untimely death. It examines the narratives of female martyrdom in Chinese literature from late imperial to modern China in particular, explores the shift from female chaste martyrs to revolutionary female martyrs, and considers how the advocacy of female martyrdom shapes and problematizes state ideologies. Female martyrdom has been promoted in the process of the cultivation of loyalty throughout Chinese history. -
The Political Trajectories of Chen Duxiu and Qu Qiubai, Two Founding Leaders of the Chinese Communist Party: to Communism and Back Again
THE POLITICAL TRAJECTORIES OF CHEN DUXIU AND QU QIUBAI, TWO FOUNDING LEADERS OF THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY: TO COMMUNISM AND BACK AGAIN A THESIS Presented to The Faculty of the Department of History Colorado College In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Bachelor of Arts By Kelly Cheung December/2012 Cheung 2 Table of Contents Preface and Introduction 4 List of Abbreviations 9 Names 9 Brief Historiography 10 Biographic Similarities 16 Early Family Life 16 Education and Pre-Marxist Revolutionary Activities 22 Professional Posts 24 The Western-Informed Development of Marxism in Chen Duxiu and Qu Qiubai 27 Introduction 27 Historiography 28 Historical Context – Previous Attempts at Reform in China 30 “What is Marxism?” as Interpreted by Lenin and Stalin 32 Chen and the Deweyan Individual 39 Chen’s Shift From Anti-Traditionalism 42 The West as Interpreted through Dewey and Lenin 44 Dewey’s Lessons on Cultural, Political and Economic Arrangements 48 The Impact of Deweyan Thought on Qu 59 Chen’s Conversion to Marxism and the Role of the Comintern 60 Comintern’s Role in the Rise of the CCP 61 The Peak of Chen’s Marxism 66 Qu Qiubai’s Critical Role in the Chinese Understanding of Marxism 71 Conclusion 75 Shaping the Chinese Literary Revival 77 Introduction 77 Problems of Using Literature as Propaganda 80 The Use and Debate over Western European and Russian Influences 83 Personal Writing Styles 86 The Rise of Anti-Confucianism In The Post-WWI Era 90 The Literary Revolution’s Audience and Enlightened Leader 95 Qu’s Critical Development -
1626836329477781.Pdf
TH THE 12 INTERNATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT AND CONSTRUCTION FORUM 第 12 届国际基础设施投资与建设高峰论坛 国别或区域 姓名 职务 单位 Country/ Name Title Organization Region 任鸿斌 部长助理 Ren Hongbin Assistant Minister 孙彤 台港澳司司长 Sun Tong Director General, Department of Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao Affairs 王胜文 合作司司长 Wang Director General, Department of Outward Investment and Economic Shengwen Cooperation 彭 涛 美大司副司长 Peng Tao Deputy Director General, Department of American and Oceanian Affairs 合作司二级巡视员、综合处处长 李洪伟 Deputy Director General, Department of Outward Investment and Li Hongwei Economic Cooperation 王鑫 综合司处长 Wang Xin Director, Comprehensive Department 合作司处长 魏海峰 Director, Department of Outward Investment and Economic Wei Haifeng Cooperation 合作司处长 吴文文 Director, Department of Outward Investment and Economic Wu Wenwen Cooperation 刘晓峰 美大司处长 Liu Xiaofeng Director, Department of American and Oceanian Affairs 商务部 中国 Minisrty of Commerce China 合作司副处长 张超 Deputy Director, Department of Outward Investment and Economic Zhang Chao Cooperation 马骁 台港澳司副处长 Ma Xiao Deputy Director, Department of Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao Affairs 韩飞 办公厅四级调研员 Han Fei Deputy Director 郭煜坤 美大司一级主任科员 Guo Yukun Officer, Department of American and Oceanian Affairs 郭汝达 部领导秘书 Guo Ruda Officer 宫涛 台港澳司三级主任科员 Gong Tao Officer, Department of Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao Affairs 胡佳裕 美大司三级主任科员 Hu Jiayu Officer, Department of American and Oceanian Affairs 郑瀚文 外事司翻译处四级主任科员 Zheng Hanwen Officer, Department of Foreign Affairs 02 WWW.IIICF.ORG TH THE 12 INTERNATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT AND CONSTRUCTION FORUM