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Essays! ALL of the following essays are available for same
day delivery via your choice of e-mail or fax! Only $/pg
+ FREE bibliography!
Make your selection below!...
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Papers On China & Chinese Issues
Page 53 of 53
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Women in China: Change
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A 5 page paper which examines how the position and role of women in China has changed in the past few centuries. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: RAwmchn.rtf
Women in Traditional Japanese and Chinese Cultures
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This 5 page paper discusses the role of women in traditional Japanese and Chinese cultures, and how that role has evolved over the years. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: HVWmAsia.rtf
Women Warriors in Hong Kong Films
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An 8 page research paper on the women warrior genre in Hong Kong films. The writer details the history of the genre, its main features, and describes several examples. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: Hongfilm.wps
World War II and Asian Immigrants:
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This 4 page paper discusses the influx of Asian immigrants to the United States after World War II and how it was common for Americans to lump them all together instead of identifying the many different nationalities that actually comprised this influx. Furthermore, this paper delves into the reasons for this misunderstanding of the diversity of Asian immigrants. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: GSAsnimm.rtf
Zhang Deyi's Point of View
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This 3 page paper examines the work Diary of a Chinese Diplomat. The paper argues that the author has a worldview that divides east and west. No additional sources cited.
Filename: SA627DZ.rtf
Zhu Xiao Di/30 Years in a Red House
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A 5 page essay that profiles Zhu Xiao Di's memoir of growing up in Communist China, focusing on how the period of the Cultural Revolution changed his family's circumstances. Zhu Xiao Di's Thirty years in a Red House is a revealing account of what it was like to grow-up during the Cultural Revolution in Communist China. Zhu's family were educated, cultured people who were idealistic about the Communist cause. However, their belief in Communism did not provide protection from the persecutions of the cultural revolution. Zhu's account shows that it was families like his, that is, the country's intellectuals, who ultimately suffered the most from the societal restructuring called the Cultural Revolution. No additional sources cited.
Filename: kh30yred.rtf
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