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Bangladesh

Bangladesh

History

Liu Jian

201K0

Bangladesh is like a piece of green emerald, embedded in the subcontinent on the southern side of the Himalayas. The Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers meet in its hinterland, making it the third largest river in the world. It is home to the Bengal tiger and has the longest natural beach in the world. In this beautiful land, Buddhism, Hinduism and Islam have each taken the lead. It is a young country with a long history and rich culture. Since its independence in 1971, in less than 40 years, its democratic politics has gradually matured, and its economy and society have continued to develop, leaving a distinct and profound impression on the world. The friendly relations between Bangladesh and China are as long-standing as the Brahmaputra River and as indestructible as the Himalayas.

Keep Watch

Keep Watch

Literature

Liu Jian

32K0

"Watching" contains more than 100 new works written by Liu Jian in the past two years, recording his travels and his work for public welfare. These poems are full of complex and rich poetic flavor, showing the author's broad mind and grandeur. The tone of the poem is calm, the scenes blend together, and the language is fluent and easy to read.

Toward Posthumanism: Richard Rorty's Literary Theory and Cultural Criticism

Liu Jian

252K0

This book traces the line of traditional humanist criticism "Neoclassicism-New Humanism-New Criticism", and uses "post-philosophical culture" as the background to analyze the post-humanist ideological characteristics of Richard Rorty's literary theory and cultural criticism. Posthumanism runs through a kind of pragmatism, finiteism and weak philosophy. It inherits and transcends traditional humanism in aspects such as literary interpretation, classics, criticism and values. Compared with Jameson, Bloom, Derrida and others, Rorty's cultural aesthetic taste lies between classical humanism, neo-romanticism and reader response criticism. He is a leftist who is not "left" enough, a rightist who is not "right" enough, and a postmodernist who is not "post" enough.