- IDEALS Home
- →
- College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
- →
- Dept. of East Asian Languages and Cultures
- →
- Dissertations and Theses - East Asian Languages and Cultures
- →
- Browse Dissertations and Theses - East Asian Languages and Cultures by Title
Browse Dissertations and Theses - East Asian Languages and Cultures by Title
Now showing items 44-50 of 50
-
(2019-04-11)Chinese idioms originated from the pre-Qin dynasty (~ 221 A.D.) and are the linguistic and cultural heritage of the Chinese civilization. However, only 2.47% of the still-in-use idioms have a regular structure that follows ...
application/pdf
PDF (2MB)
-
(2008)As an integral part of the Chinese Buddhist exegetical tradition, introductions in Qixinlun commentaries introduce their treatise by asking a set of fully established questions that are commonly asked in almost all exegetical ...
application/pdf
PDF (4MB)
-
Transfiguring the female: women and girls engaging the transnational in late twentieth century Japan (2010-08-31)This dissertation examines three spheres of women and adolescent girls who overtly challenged gender and sexual norms in late twentieth century Japan: the women involved in the uman ribu [women’s liberation] movement and ...
application/pdf
PDF (20MB)
-
(2019-04-17)Feminism was long sidelined as a bourgeois ideology in Communist China and has never fully recovered as the leading apparatus for female empowerment. Chinese women have made tremendous progress under the leadership of the ...
application/pdf
PDF (91MB)
-
(2019-04-17)Although shenjing shuairuo (SJSR) has remained a salient clinical and cultural concept in China since the first decade of the twentieth century, in 1980 neurasthenia was removed from the American Psychiatric Association’s ...
application/pdf
PDF (8MB)
-
(2011-08-25)My dissertation, “Wounds in Time: the Aesthetic Afterlives of the Cultural Revolution,” departs from the traditional historicist approach to the Cultural Revolution, contributing instead an investigation of the Cultural ...
application/pdf
PDF (2MB)
-
(2015-07-09)This dissertation explores how Pe̍h-oē-jī (Jiaohui roma zi/Baihua zi, literally meaning “church romanization” or “vernacular script” in Chinese, POJ hereafter) was transformed from a “foreign” writing system as a religious ...
application/pdf
PDF (4MB)
Now showing items 44-50 of 50