Results 131 to 140 of about 423 (184)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Games and Culture, 2008
This article examines discourse about Internet addiction and video—game—related suicide in the People's Republic of China. Through an analysis of media reportage, interview transcripts, and chat rooms, a preliminary account of the origins of contemporary Chinese concerns with Internet addiction is provided. This approach differs from biomedical models,
Golub, Alex, Lingley, Kate
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This article examines discourse about Internet addiction and video—game—related suicide in the People's Republic of China. Through an analysis of media reportage, interview transcripts, and chat rooms, a preliminary account of the origins of contemporary Chinese concerns with Internet addiction is provided. This approach differs from biomedical models,
Golub, Alex, Lingley, Kate
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2021
Abstract The Qing Empire (1636–1912) used the historical evolution of three governments within the state to manage tensions between a reliance upon the coherence of local communities and a containment of the possibilities for local autonomy.
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Abstract The Qing Empire (1636–1912) used the historical evolution of three governments within the state to manage tensions between a reliance upon the coherence of local communities and a containment of the possibilities for local autonomy.
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China's last empire: the great Qing
Choice Reviews Online, 2010(2010). China's Last Empire: The Great Qing. The Chinese Historical Review: Vol. 17, No. 2, pp. 243-247.
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Ideology and Organization in the Qing Empire
Journal of Early Modern History, 2010AbstractThis article considers an essay on provincial government written by the Yongzheng Emperor of China shortly after his ascension to the throne in 1723. The essay treats provincial governors’ role in personnel, financial and military matters and the problems of China’s southwest.
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The Qing Empire (China), Imperialism, and the Modern World
History Compass, 2011Abstract China has become the subject of increasing attention in the study of world history. However, many world history texts still place the last Chinese dynasty, the Qing, in the category of the ‘losers’: victims of Western imperialism whose inability to adjust to the times led to their demise.
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Debating China: Romantic Fictions of the Qing Empire, 1760–1800
2007This chapter is focused on the European fascination with a different other from those which are at the present time more commonly discussed in Romantic scholarship, the Celestial Empire of the Qing dynasty (1644–1912). The Qing Empire was certainly a debatable and much debated land in the mid- to late eighteenth century.
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The “Greening” of Empire: The European Green Deal as the EU first agenda
Political Geography, 2023Tomaso Ferrando, Brototi Roy
exaly

