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CHINESE CHEMICAL LETTERS the Official Journal of the Chinese Chemical Society
CHINESE CHEMICAL LETTERS The official journal of the Chinese Chemical Society AUTHOR INFORMATION PACK TABLE OF CONTENTS XXX . • Description p.1 • Impact Factor p.1 • Abstracting and Indexing p.1 • Editorial Board p.1 • Guide for Authors p.6 ISSN: 1001-8417 DESCRIPTION . Chinese Chemical Letters (CCL) (ISSN 1001-8417) was founded in July 1990. The journal publishes preliminary accounts in the whole field of chemistry, including inorganic chemistry, organic chemistry, analytical chemistry, physical chemistry, polymer chemistry, applied chemistry, etc., satisfying a real and urgent need for the dissemination of research results, especially hot topics. The journal does not accept articles previously published or scheduled to be published. To verify originality, your article may be checked by the originality detection service CrossCheck. The types of manuscripts include the original researches and the mini-reviews. The experimental evidence necessary to support your manuscript should be supplied for the referees and eventual publication as Electronic Supplementary Information. The mini-reviews are written by leading scientists within their field and summarized recent work from a personal perspective. They cover many exciting and innovative fields and are of general interest to all chemists. IMPACT FACTOR . 2020: 6.779 © Clarivate Analytics Journal Citation Reports 2021 ABSTRACTING AND INDEXING . Science Citation Index Expanded Chemical Abstracts Chemical Citation Index EDITORIAL BOARD . Editor-in-Chief Xuhong Qian, East China Normal University -
China's Sports Heroes: Nationalism, Patriotism, and Gold Medal
The International Journal of the History of Sport ISSN: 0952-3367 (Print) 1743-9035 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/fhsp20 China’s Sports Heroes: Nationalism, Patriotism, and Gold Medal Lu Zhouxiang & Fan Hong To cite this article: Lu Zhouxiang & Fan Hong (2019) China’s Sports Heroes: Nationalism, Patriotism, and Gold Medal, The International Journal of the History of Sport, 36:7-8, 748-763, DOI: 10.1080/09523367.2019.1657839 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/09523367.2019.1657839 Published online: 30 Sep 2019. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 268 View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=fhsp20 THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF SPORT 2019, VOL. 36, NOS. 7–8, 748–763 https://doi.org/10.1080/09523367.2019.1657839 China’s Sports Heroes: Nationalism, Patriotism, and Gold Medal Lu Zhouxianga and Fan Hongb aSchool of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures, National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland; bThe University of Bangor, Bangor, UK ABSTRACT KEYWORDS Sport has been of great importance to the construction of China; hero; politics; Chinese national consciousness during the past century. This art- nationalism; icle examines how China’s sport celebrities have played their part sports patriotism in nation building and identity construction. It points out that Chinese athletes’ participation in international sporting events in the first half of the twentieth century demonstrated China’s motivation to stay engaged with the world, and therefore led to their being regarded as national heroes. -
China Rejuvenated?: Governmentality, Subjectivity, and Normativity the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games
UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) China rejuvenated? Governmentality, subjectivity, and normativity: the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games Chong, P.L.G. Publication date 2012 Document Version Final published version Link to publication Citation for published version (APA): Chong, P. L. G. (2012). China rejuvenated? Governmentality, subjectivity, and normativity: the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games. Iskamp drukkers b.v. General rights It is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), other than for strictly personal, individual use, unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Disclaimer/Complaints regulations If you believe that digital publication of certain material infringes any of your rights or (privacy) interests, please let the Library know, stating your reasons. In case of a legitimate complaint, the Library will make the material inaccessible and/or remove it from the website. Please Ask the Library: https://uba.uva.nl/en/contact, or a letter to: Library of the University of Amsterdam, Secretariat, Singel 425, 1012 WP Amsterdam, The Netherlands. You will be contacted as soon as possible. UvA-DARE is a service provided by the library of the University of Amsterdam (https://dare.uva.nl) Download date:04 Oct 2021 China Rejuvenated?: Governmentality, Subjectivity, and Normativity The 2008 Beijing Olympic Games © Gladys Pak Lei Chong, 2012 ISBN: 978-94-6191-369-2 Cover design by Yook Koo Printed by Ipskamp Drukkers B.V. The Netherlands China Rejuvenated?: Governmentality, Subjectivity, and Normativity The 2008 Beijing Olympic Games Academisch Proefschrift Ter verkrijging van de graad van doctor aan de Universiteit van Amsterdam op gezag van de Rector Magnificus prof. -
2018 Chinese Control and Decision Conference (CCDC 2018)
2018 Chinese Control and Decision Conference (CCDC 2018) Shenyang, China 9-11 June 2018 Pages 1-680 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1851D-POD ISBN: 978-1-5386-1245-3 1/10 Copyright © 2018 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. All Rights Reserved Copyright and Reprint Permissions: Abstracting is permitted with credit to the source. Libraries are permitted to photocopy beyond the limit of U.S. copyright law for private use of patrons those articles in this volume that carry a code at the bottom of the first page, provided the per-copy fee indicated in the code is paid through Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923. For other copying, reprint or republication permission, write to IEEE Copyrights Manager, IEEE Service Center, 445 Hoes Lane, Piscataway, NJ 08854. All rights reserved. *** This is a print representation of what appears in the IEEE Digital Library. Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1851D-POD ISBN (Print-On-Demand): 978-1-5386-1245-3 ISBN (Online): 978-1-5386-1244-6 ISSN: 1948-9439 Additional Copies of This Publication Are Available From: Curran Associates, Inc 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 USA Phone: (845) 758-0400 Fax: (845) 758-2633 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com Technical Papers Session SatA01:Adaptive Control (I) Venue Room01 Date/Time 15:50-17:50 Chair Wei Guan, Shenyang Aerospace Univ. Co-Chair TianNing Chen, Xi'an Jiaotong Univ. 15:50-16:10 SatA01-1 A new variable step size LMS adaptive algorithm 1 Qun Niu, Xi'an Jiaotong Univ. -
ASME® 2019 MNHMT 6Th ASME International Conference of Micro/Nanoscale Heat and Mass Transfer
® ASME 2019 MNHMT 6th ASME International Conference of Micro/Nanoscale Heat and Mass Transfer CONFERENCE July 8–10, 2019 Sweetland Hotel Program Dalian, China The American Society of Mechanical Engineers® ASME® Welcome On behalf of the Organizing Committee, it is our great pleasure to welcome you to the 6th ASME Micro/Nanoscale Heat & Mass Transfer International Conference (MNHMT2019). The conference is held at Sweetland Hotel in Dalian, China from July 8 to 10, 2019. It is a follow-up conference to the first five conferences, which were held in Tainan (January 2008), Shanghai (December 2009), Atlanta (2012), Hong Kong (2013), and Singapore (2016). The Conference is sponsored by Dalian Maritime University and Dalian University of Technology. Hongbin Ma PROGRAM CHAIR This conference series is dedicated to the late Dr. Chang-Lin Tien (1935–2002), a world-renowned scholar and leader in higher education. His intellect and unique vision continue to inspire our efforts in expanding the frontiers of micro/ nanoscale heat and mass transfer. Research and education on micro/nanoscale heat and mass transfer have advanced rapidly over the last two decades through many dedicated individuals and team efforts, with direct impact now extending into various fields in both science and engineering. This conference provides a forum for researchers, educators and practitioners around the world to exchange ideas on the state-of-the-art research and development and Dongqing Li identify future research needs in this emerging interdisciplinary field. The CONFERENCE CHAIR technical program contains 331 presentations organized into 51 sessions. In addition, the conference features 18 exciting plenary/keynote talks, which span all core areas of interest to our research community. -
Â•Š a Century of Olympic Consciousness and National Anxiety in China
“How Could Anyone Respect Us?” A Century of Olympic Consciousness and National Anxiety in China Andrew Morris Associate Professor of History California Polytechnic State University, San Louis Obispo “China has never produced an earthshaking scientist or author or explorer ... not even a talentedathletefortheOlympics! Whenyouthinkaboutit,howcouldanyonerespectus?” – Novelist Lao She, Ma and Son (1935)1 Much of the history of China’s modern sports and physical culture program (tiyu) has been phrased, experienced, understood, and remembered as a gesture of national defense. Enemies have come, gone, and come again—the Western and Japanese im perialists, the Communists, the Nationalists, the footbound and weak, the ignorant and unhygienic, the decadent and materialistic, Taiwan, Falun Gong, and (again) U.S. and Japanese imperialists. All have served as forces that threatened China’s national body and had to be defeated with the rhythms, motions, disciplines, and ideologies of modern sport. Thus, over the last century, sport in China has served as a marker of political and social power, but it has also represented a profound national anxiety. This article investigates this realm and the tension between power and anxiety, and strength and fear, that has characterized so many of China’s political movements over its many governmental transitions since the fall of the Qing Dynasty. SPORT AND NATIONAL HUMILIATION From the earliest moments of the Republic of China period (1912–1949), all types of physical culture exhibited an affinity with a defensive nationalism. The first high-profile example of anti-imperialism and nationalism through Chinese sport came in the 1915 Andrew Morris is an associate professor of history at California Polytechnic State University, San Louis Obispo. -
Sunday, October 2, 2016
Sunday, October 2, 2016 A01—Batteries and Energy Technology Joint General Session Abst# 3 Novel Vanadium Based Cation-Disordered Lithium Transition Metal Oxides for Li- Ion Batteries by Musa Cambaz, Helmholtz Institute Ulm for Electrochemical Storage; Maximilian Fichtner, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany Abst# 12 In Operando Structural and Acoustic Analysis of Lithium-Ion Batteries by Andrew Hsieh, Princeton University; Greg Davies, MAE/ACEE Princeton University; Michael Wang, Princeton University; Daniel Steingart, Princeton University Abst# 14 Battery Degradation and Cost Analysis of a Lithium Ion Battery System for a 1 MW Green Energy Hub (GEH) by Larry Morris, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering; Mark Weatherspoon, Florida A&M University - Florida State University Abst# 16 Reconfigurable Battery Pack for a Lithium Based Battery Charger for BMS Applications by Larry Morris, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering; Mark Weatherspoon, Florida A&M University - Florida State University; Jamal Stephens, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering; Pedro Moss, Florida A&M University - Florida State University A05—Beyond Li-ion Batteries Abst# 639 Building Stable Radical Cations for Non-Aqueous Redox Flow Batteries by Lu Zhang, Joint Center for Energy Storage Research (JCESR); Ilya Shkrob, Argonne National Laboratory; Wes Brogden, University of Michgan; Wentao Duan, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Xiaoliang Wei, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Rajeev Assary, Materials Science Division, -
The Metamorphosis of Bodily Discourse in Olympic Coverage in China: the “Sick Man of East Asia” and Chinese Nationalism
早稲田大学審査学位論文 博士(スポーツ科学) The Metamorphosis of Bodily Discourse in Olympic Coverage in China: The “Sick Man of East Asia” and Chinese Nationalism 中国のオリンピック報道における身体ディスコースの変容 -「東亜病夫」と中国ナショナリズム- 2016年1月 早稲田大学大学院 スポーツ科学研究科 丁 一吟 DING, Yiyin 研究指導教員: リー・トンプソン 教授 Table of Contents Table of Contents ................................................................................................. i List of Figures ...................................................................................................... v List of Tables .................................................................................................... viii Acknowledgements ........................................................................................... ix Notes on Translation and Use of Terms ............................................................ xi Chapter 1. Introduction ...................................................................................... 1 1.1 Prelude: “Sick Man of East Asia” Phenomenon in Contemporary Chinese Popular Culture .......................................................................................................... 1 1.2 Olympics in China: History and external politics ............................................... 5 1.3 Sporting Stereotype and National Identity ......................................................... 9 1.4 Sport and the Body in China ............................................................................... 11 1.5 Chapter Overview ............................................................................................... -
Monday, August 12
Level 2 - Level 2 - Level 2 - Level 3 - Level 3 - Level 3 - Level 3 - Level 3 - Level 3 - Time Regency Regency Regency Events Events Events Events II Events III Events V I II III I-a I-b VI Monday, August 12 0830-0900 Opening Ceremony Keynote 1: Intelligent Wireless Resource 0900-0945 Management: Learning and Optimization (Zhi-Quan (Tom) Luo) 0946-1030 Keynote 2: The 5G Journey and the Next Frontiers (Peiying Zhu) 1100-1145 Keynote 3: Deep Learning in Physical Layer Communications (Geoffrey Ye Li) 1146-12#30 Keynote 4: Deep Learning in Network Traffic Control (Nei Kato) NGNI1: Next CT1: IOT2: OCS: Optical Panel 1: IP1: Invited IP2: Invited IOT1: Internet Generation Security1: 1400-15#30 Communications Internet of Communications Wireless 2030 Papers 1 Papers 2 of Things 1 Networks and Security 1 Theory 1 Things 2 and Systems Internet 1 Panel 2: Driving into 5G SPC1: Signal NGNI2: Next SPC2: Signal WCS1: WN1: and beyond: IP3: Invited IP4: Invited Processing for Generation Security2: Processing for Wireless 1600-17#30 Wireless Vehicular Papers 3 Papers 4 Communications Networks and Security 2 Communications Communications Networking 1 Communications 1 Internet 2 2 1 and Networking Tuesday, August 13 Keynote 5: Future Wireless Network Architecture for 0900-0945 the Machines of Artificial Intelligence (Kwang-Cheng Chen) Keynote 6: Three Stories on IoT (Internet-of-Things) 0946-1030 Connectivity: Ultra-Reliability, Massiveness, and Blockchains (Petar Popovski) CT2: IOT3: NGNI3: Next WCS2: SPC3: Signal NGNI4: Next Generation Wireless Processing -
The Chinese Internal Martial Arts As Discourse, Aesthetics, and Cultural Trope (1850-1940)
Strength From Within: the Chinese Internal Martial Arts as Discourse, Aesthetics, and Cultural Trope (1850-1940) By Pei-San Ng A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Chinese Language in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Andrew F. Jones, Chair Professor Mark Csikszentmihalyi Professor Thomas W. Laqueur Fall 2016 1 Abstract Strength From Within: the Chinese Internal Martial Arts as Discourse, Aesthetics, and Cultural Trope (1850-1940) by Pei-San Ng Doctor of Philosophy in Chinese Language University of California, Berkeley Professor Andrew F. Jones, Chair My dissertation explores a cultural history of the body as reflected in meditative and therapeutic forms of the Chinese martial arts in nineteenth and early twentieth-century China. Precursors of the more familiar present-day taijiquan 太極拳 and qigong 氣功, these forms of martial arts techniques focus on the inward cultivation of qi 氣 and other apparently ineffable energies of the body. They revolve around the harnessing of “internal strength” or neigong 內功. These notions of a strength derived from an invisible, intangible, yet embodied qi came to represent a significant counterweight to sports, exercise science, the Physical Culture movement, physiology, and other Western ideas of muscularity and the body that were being imported into China at the time. What role would such competing discourses of the body play in shaping contemporary ideas of embodiment? How would it raise the stakes in an era already ideologically charged with the intertwined issues of nationalism and imperialism, and so-called scientific modernity and indigenous tradition? This study is an inquiry into the epistemological and ontological ramifications of the idea of neigong internal strength, tracing the popular spread of the idea and its impact in late Qing and Republican China vernacular discourse. -
Colonial Korea and the Olympic Games, 1910–1945
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2016 Colonial Korea and the Olympic Games, 1910–1945 Seok Lee University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the Asian History Commons, and the Kinesiology Commons Recommended Citation Lee, Seok, "Colonial Korea and the Olympic Games, 1910–1945" (2016). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 1836. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/1836 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/1836 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Colonial Korea and the Olympic Games, 1910–1945 Abstract This dissertation examines how Koreans received and consumed the Olympic Games under Japanese colonial rule (1910–1945). Although a growing body of research on colonial Korea addresses a range of topics beyond politics and economy, sports is still a relatively neglected topic in this field. By exploring Olympic fever in colonial Korea, this study shows how multifaceted aspects of Korean society became a part of the global sports world. Korean athletes participated in the 1932 Summer, 1936 Winter, and 1936 Summer Games as part of the Japanese delegation, attracting much attention from members of all walks of life in colonial Korea. Public figures as varied as political leaders, intellectuals, sport journalists, and athletes recognized and promoted the Games through the burgeoning mass media. As the Olympic Games were a powerful tool for promoting Korean nationalism, Korean athletes’ performance was in the spotlight of Korean vernacular media, which also pursued commercial interests in featuring scandals of athletes. Nevertheless, many advocates of public gymnastics criticized what they perceived as the bourgeois-oriented, if not elitist, nature of the Games. -
IEEE Smartiot 2019
2019 IEEE International Conference on Smart Internet of Things IEEE SmartIoT 2019 Tianjin · China 9-11 August 2019 CONTENTS 1. Introduction 01 2. Committee 02 3. Program 05 4. Keynote Speakers 06 5. Venue 14 6. Contact us 15 Introduction Internet of Things (IoT) plays an important role in the current and future generation of information, network, and communication developing and applications. Smart IoT is an exciting emerging research field that has great potential to transform both our understanding of fundamental computer science principles and our standard of living. IoT is being employed in more and more areas making “Everything Smart”, such as smart home, smart city, intelligent transportation, environment monitoring, security systems, and advanced manufacturing. IEEE International Conference on Smart Internet of Things (IEEE SmartIoT) focuses on these challenges. ORGANIZING COMMITTEE General Chairs • Mahmoud Daneshmand, Stevens Institute of Technology, USA • Keqiu Li, Tianjin University, China • Dapeng Oliver Wu, University of Florida, USA Program Chairs • Mohammed Atiquzzaman, University of Oklahoma, USA • Xiaobo Zhou, Tianjin University, China • Ata Ullah, National University of Modern Languages, Islamabad, Pakistan Workshop Chairs • Wenbing Zhao, Cleveland State University, USA • Xin Chen, Beijing Information Science and Technology, China • Guangsheng Feng, Harbin Engineering University, China Demo/Poster Chairs • Chun-Wei Tsai, National Chung-Hsing University, Taiwan • Yanjun Shi, Dalian University of Technology, China • Qinglin