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Ning Wang
Researcher at Tsinghua University
Publications - 5
Citations - 311
Ning Wang is an academic researcher from Tsinghua University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Comparative literature & Globalization. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications receiving 279 citations. Previous affiliations of Ning Wang include Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
Papers
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Death of a Discipline
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors argue that comparative literature in China is still very energetic playing a leading role in Chinese-Western cultural and academic exchange and communication, and they also argue that even in the age of globalization, comparative literature studies in China are still flourishing as it is closely related to or even combined with world literature into one discipline, with many of the internationally discussed theoretic topics "globalized" in the Chinese context.
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Toward a literary environmental ethics: a reflection on eco-criticism
TL;DR: The authors deconstruct from a post-modern eco-critical perspective the exclusiveness of the people-oriented ethics dominated in current Chinese ideology, and at the same time, questions the nature-earth-centric mode of thinking advocated by the eco-critics.
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Globalization and Culture: the Chinese Cultural and Intellectual Strategy
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors traced the origin of globalization in Chinese culture and offered some positive and practical strategy toward its challenge, and pointed out that although cultural globalization might easily blur the cultural identity of an individual national culture, it could also bring about something positive.
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Ibsen metamorphosed: textual re-appropriations in the Chinese context
Ning Wang,Ning Wang +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the translation of Henrik Ibsen's plays in the Chinese context and deal with different productions of the plays in 21st-century China, arguing that such translations and retranslations endow Ibsens and his plays with a "continued" life or "afterlife", enabling him to remain one of the best-known Western writers.
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Toward “Glocalized” orientations: Current literary and cultural studies in China
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper discussed how Cultural Studies is introduced into the Chinese context, how it is integrated with domestic elite culture studies and literary studies, and how cultural studies is institutionalized in Chinese context and developed into the phase of carrying on equal dialogues with the Western scholarship in the age of globalization.