ZGBriefs | February 10, 2022
...soon live within and the necessary boundaries that will help them thrive. Books Cross-Cultural Encounters: China and the Reformed Church in America – Book Review (February 5, 2022, Global China Center) What...
...soon live within and the necessary boundaries that will help them thrive. Books Cross-Cultural Encounters: China and the Reformed Church in America – Book Review (February 5, 2022, Global China Center) What...
...of Autumn.” In the “Months” from the Book of Rites in Rites of Zhou, it says, “Take care of the elderly in the second month of Autumn, and distribute rice...
...ChinaSource might adapt to meet future needs, the staff team read a book together that challenged our ideas on work and measuring results in the faith-based non-profit context. One application...
.... and Why by Richard Nisbett. The crux of the book’s argument is that Westerners and Asians think differently because of their different ancient roots. Westerners are highly influenced by...
...book in China that puts the stories of Joseph, Moses, and David in a contemporary context. It is classified as an inspirational book for young people. However, beginning with Weibo...
...again is Turning Bricks into Jade: Critical Incidents for Mutual Understanding among Chinese and Americans. Edited by Mary Wong and others, this book is a collection of “critical incidents,” or stories...
...Set of Gruelling Tests (subscription required) (February 5, 2026, The Economist) Around 2024 Mr Wang, a tutor for people taking graduate-admissions tests, saw the number of students in his classes...
...eyes of others. This perception then forms the basis for their personal sense of integrity, honor, shame, prestige, and dignity.12 In Chris Flanders’ book, About Face: Rethinking Face for the...
...book, Covell tried to analyze outstanding attempts to “bring the Christian faith and Chinese culture together,” and the focus “is on the shape and nature of the message that has...
...Siberian Russia (my work sometimes takes me beyond China north to Russia and Mongolia). According to what readers back in The West are already saying about the book, it is...
...or searching for the one book that will propel them from high school to Harvard or at least help them through the gāokǎo (national college entrance exam) and enter Beijing...
...to afford financially it is because they are seeking fulfillment of the most primitive “complete narcissism.” Wu Zhi-hong explains “complete narcissism” in his book Nation of Giant Infants: Complete narcissism...