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Summer and Siberia
Literature夏与西伯利亚
Ni Zhange
★"Deep River in the World" and "Meeting in the Dark" 12 years later, a new collection of essays★ I always prefer the indifference after the blood is burned out, or the occasional unbearable affection of a world-weary person. "Summer and Siberia" is the latest collection of essays by Ni Zhange, a scholar living in the United States. The book reviews popular writers such as Kazuo Ishiguro, Patti Smith, Jonathan Franzen, and David Foster Wallace. It also introduces outstanding but unknown poets like Milan Diodievich. It talks about classics and their evolution, as well as mythology, religion, science fiction, and even subcultures. It has a broad vision and profound exploration. Behind these articles is a rigorously trained academic vision and insight into human affairs. Her words puncture the illusion of literature and art, allowing people to see how literature is a set of concepts, discourses and systems that are co-generated with modern society. But it also makes people know that literature is a compensation for all those who have been harmed and deprived, balancing the dual considerations of society and history, soul and temperament. In the author's own words, these are articles written after "eating as much salt as reading books." Ni Zhange, a young writer, poet and scholar. PhD in Religion and Literature from the University of Chicago Divinity School (2009), a visiting fellow in "Women's Studies in Religion" at Harvard Divinity School (2010-11), and currently an associate professor in the Department of Religion and Culture at Virginia Tech. He has published prose collections "Meeting in the Dark" and "The Deep River in the World", novels "The Strange Traveler", poetry collections "Vacuum Hometown" and "The White-Knife Sea", and the academic monograph ThePaganWritesBack: WhenWorldReligionMeetsWorldLiterature.
★"Deep River in the World" and "Meeting in the Dark" 12 years later, a new collection of essays★ I always prefer the indifference after the blood is burned out, or the occasional unbearable affection of a world-weary person. "Summer and Siberia" is the latest collection of essays by Ni Zhange, a scholar living in the United States. The book reviews popular writers such as Kazuo Ishiguro, Patti Smith, Jonathan Franzen, and David Foster Wallace. It also introduces outstanding but unknown poets like Milan Diodievich. It talks about classics and their evolution, as well as mythology, religion, science fiction, and even subcultures. It has a broad vision and profound exploration. Behind these articles is a rigorously trained academic vision and insight into human affairs. Her words puncture the illusion of literature and art, allowing people to see how literature is a set of concepts, discourses and systems that are co-generated with modern society. But it also makes people know that literature is a compensation for all those who have been harmed and deprived, balancing the dual considerations of society and history, soul and temperament. In the author's own words, these are articles written after "eating as much salt as reading books." Ni Zhange, a young writer, poet and scholar. PhD in Religion and Literature from the University of Chicago Divinity School (2009), a visiting fellow in "Women's Studies in Religion" at Harvard Divinity School (2010-11), and currently an associate professor in the Department of Religion and Culture at Virginia Tech. He has published prose collections "Meeting in the Dark" and "The Deep River in the World", novels "The Strange Traveler", poetry collections "Vacuum Hometown" and "The White-Knife Sea", and the academic monograph ThePaganWritesBack: WhenWorldReligionMeetsWorldLiterature.

Stranger
Literature异旅人
Ni Zhange
Ken Kitagawa, Kitagawa Ken, the second son of a wealthy Japanese family, has a beautiful face of Western descent and a self-destructive heart. Influenced by the bilingual writer Tawada Yoko, I studied in the Russian Department of Waseda University. After graduation, I went to the United States to study at G University, where I met all kinds of teachers and students in the college environment. Isaac, a chatty Ph. D. In comparative literature, Fanny, a young girl who works in an ice cream shop, Isaac's Chinese roommate, Professor C, the red-haired and slovenly Professor C, Isaac's mentor, Professor K, the Tyrannosaurus Rex, and Professor M, the top classical professor in the women's restroom. The academy is not an ivory tower. There are both swords and swords competing for the position of the pyramid, and there are also multi-faceted relationships between emotions and the body. In Yan's first-person narration, youth is not a smooth road; it is full of self-analysis, self-dislike, and self-deception. While wandering in a foreign land, Yan and Professor C gradually develop an unreliable connection like a spider's thread. Ni Zhange, a young writer, poet and scholar. PhD in Religion and Literature from the University of Chicago Divinity School (2009), Visiting Fellow in Women in Religion at Harvard Divinity School (2010-11), and currently an associate professor in the Department of Religion and Culture at Virginia Tech. He has published prose collections "Meeting in the Dark" and "The Deep River in the World", novels "The Strange Traveler", poetry collections "Vacuum Hometown" and "The White-Knife Sea", and the academic monograph ThePaganWritesBack: WhenWorldReligionMeetsWorldLiterature.
Ken Kitagawa, Kitagawa Ken, the second son of a wealthy Japanese family, has a beautiful face of Western descent and a self-destructive heart. Influenced by the bilingual writer Tawada Yoko, I studied in the Russian Department of Waseda University. After graduation, I went to the United States to study at G University, where I met all kinds of teachers and students in the college environment. Isaac, a chatty Ph. D. In comparative literature, Fanny, a young girl who works in an ice cream shop, Isaac's Chinese roommate, Professor C, the red-haired and slovenly Professor C, Isaac's mentor, Professor K, the Tyrannosaurus Rex, and Professor M, the top classical professor in the women's restroom. The academy is not an ivory tower. There are both swords and swords competing for the position of the pyramid, and there are also multi-faceted relationships between emotions and the body. In Yan's first-person narration, youth is not a smooth road; it is full of self-analysis, self-dislike, and self-deception. While wandering in a foreign land, Yan and Professor C gradually develop an unreliable connection like a spider's thread. Ni Zhange, a young writer, poet and scholar. PhD in Religion and Literature from the University of Chicago Divinity School (2009), Visiting Fellow in Women in Religion at Harvard Divinity School (2010-11), and currently an associate professor in the Department of Religion and Culture at Virginia Tech. He has published prose collections "Meeting in the Dark" and "The Deep River in the World", novels "The Strange Traveler", poetry collections "Vacuum Hometown" and "The White-Knife Sea", and the academic monograph ThePaganWritesBack: WhenWorldReligionMeetsWorldLiterature.

倪湛舸文集·全2册(异旅人+夏与西伯利亚)
Ni Zhange
Ni Zhange's collected works include "The Strange Traveler" and "Summer and Siberia". "Strange Traveler" is a college story, a fan work of an anime masterpiece that has influenced a generation. It is also the purest story of love, which can evoke many people's memories of youth and the recollection of love that cannot be achieved. "Summer and Siberia" is a collection of essays by Ni Zhange, a scholar living in the United States. In the book, she reviews popular writers such as Kazuo Ishiguro, Patti Smith, Jonathan Franzen, and David Foster Wallace. She also introduces outstanding but unfamiliar poets like Milan Diodievich. She talks about classics and their evolution, as well as mythology, religion, science fiction, and even subcultures. She has a broad vision and profound exploration. Behind these articles is a rigorously trained academic vision and insight into human affairs. Her words puncture the illusion of literature and art, allowing people to see how literature is a set of concepts, discourses and systems that are co-generated with modern society. But it also makes people know that literature is a compensation for all those who have been harmed and deprived, balancing the dual considerations of society and history, soul and temperament.
Ni Zhange's collected works include "The Strange Traveler" and "Summer and Siberia". "Strange Traveler" is a college story, a fan work of an anime masterpiece that has influenced a generation. It is also the purest story of love, which can evoke many people's memories of youth and the recollection of love that cannot be achieved. "Summer and Siberia" is a collection of essays by Ni Zhange, a scholar living in the United States. In the book, she reviews popular writers such as Kazuo Ishiguro, Patti Smith, Jonathan Franzen, and David Foster Wallace. She also introduces outstanding but unfamiliar poets like Milan Diodievich. She talks about classics and their evolution, as well as mythology, religion, science fiction, and even subcultures. She has a broad vision and profound exploration. Behind these articles is a rigorously trained academic vision and insight into human affairs. Her words puncture the illusion of literature and art, allowing people to see how literature is a set of concepts, discourses and systems that are co-generated with modern society. But it also makes people know that literature is a compensation for all those who have been harmed and deprived, balancing the dual considerations of society and history, soul and temperament.