Arts, Literature, World Literature, Chinese, Classic
See Also:
Editor's Picks:
- Texts of The Book of Songs, The Analects, The I Jing, The Dao De Jing and the Three Hundred Tang Poems in traditional Chinese with translations in English and French.
- Essays on Taoist and Confucian classics. Also includes a timeline with literary dates and links to texts.
- Sunzi's Art of Warfare, Chinese New Year - the Spring Festival, the Scions of Huang Di and Yan Di.
- A look at the different kinds of love in the book.
- Tao Te Ching translation by Gia Fu Feng and Jane English. Guests can randomly read this Chinese classic or access the whole thing.
- Selected passages from Chuang Tzu, the Master. Connections to Western thinkers as well.
- A large collection of Chinese Taoist literature. Tao Te Ching and Chuang Tzu.
- Written by Shi Nai'An in the XIVth century, it tells the struggling of 108 brave-hearted outlaws for justice.
- Includes Chinese classical novels, prose, and poetry.
- An introduction to the language of classical Chinese, plus the author's translations of selected Tang poems. By Brian Tung.
- A Taoist treatise. Extracts and comments rooted in a 1906 translation of Yin Chih Wen by Teitaro Suzuki and Paul Carus.
- Brief introduction to "The Book of Songs", the earliest collection of Chinese poems, with excerpts.
- To educate audience worldwide of the Chinese classics through games.
- Kongming's Archives is dedicated to the classic Chinese novel, Romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong, along with historical documents like San Guo Zhi.
- Introduction and illustrated version of part of the novel of the "Journey to the West."
- Project is based on the research of Bruce and Taeko Brooks into the dating and authenticity of the classical Chinese texts.
- Dedicated to the "Romance of Three Kingdoms," with character profiles, synopsis, stories, quotes, and links.
- Monkey King, the famous chinese hero from Journey to the West. Info about many chinese version of the JTTW series.
- Chinese love story of man and white snake for Chinese Year of White Snake 2001.
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