释义 |
Examples:May 7 Cadre School (forcing educated people inre-education and peasant labor during Cultural Revolution)—UNESCO, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization—hold supremacy (of a religion, ideology, cultural norm, social group etc)—(during the cultural revolution) criticize and denounce sb publicly for their errors (often imaginary)—Han Aijing (1945-), notorious red guard leader during Cultural Revolution, spent 15 years in prison for imprisoning and torturing political leaders—educated youth (sent work in farms during cultural revolution)—Zhou Shoujuan (1895-1968), writer, translator and art collector in Suzhou, a victim of the cultural revolution—Hua Guofeng (1921-), leader of Chinese communist party after the cultural revolution—He Long (1896-1969), important communist military leader, died from persecution during the Cultural Revolution—Timbuctoo (town and historical cultural center in Mali, a World Heritage site)—class division inproletariat and bourgeoisie class enemy, in use esp. during the cultural revolution—Guo Xiaochuan (1919-1976), PRC communist poet, hero in the war with Japan, died after long persecution during Cultural Revolution—Kang Sheng (1896-1975), Chinese communist leader, a politburo member during the Cultural Revolution and posthumously blamed for some of its excesses—stinking intellectual (contemptuous term for educated people during the Cultural Revolution)—Peng Dehuai (1898-1974), top communist general, subsequently politician and politburo member, disgraced after attacking Mao's failed policies in 1959, and died after extensive persecution during the Cultural Revolution—fig. seize and subject to public criticism (e.g. right-roaders during cultural revolution)—refers all areas of Chinese presence (esp. in the cultural field), including parts of Southeast Asia, Europe and the Americas—cultural movement aspiring study and emulate classic works, at different periods of history, esp. Tang and Song—social status (in Marxist theory, esp. using during cultural revolution)—Liao Mosha (1907-1990), journalist and communist propagandist, severely criticized and imprisoned for 10 years during the Cultural Revolution—Timbuktoo (town and historical cultural center in Mali, a World Heritage site)—Ai Weiwei (1957-), Chinese artist active in architecture, photography, film, as well as cultural criticism and political activism—Jean Baudrillard (1929-2007), French cultural theorist and philosopher—the foundation of PRC economic development after the cultural revolution, building the capitalist economy within Chinese communist party control—Guo Moruo (1892-1978), writer, communist party intellectual and cultural apparatchik—Destroy the Four Olds (campaign of the Cultural Revolution)—(of one's political views) prefer left rather than right (idiom during the Cultural Revolution)—Red Guard(s) (during the Cultural Revolution, 1966-1976)—National Commission for the identification of cultural heritage—Tan Zhenlin (1902-1983), PRC revolutionary and military leader, played political role after the cultural revolution—soft power (i.e. media influence, propaganda and cultural ties in lieu of military power)—PRC State Administration of Cultural Heritage (SACH)—Deng Tuo (1912-1966), sociologist and journalist, died under persecution at the start of the Cultural Revolution—model theater (operas and ballets produced during the Cultural Revolution)—struggle, criticize, and transform (Cultural Revolution catchcry)—live on a rural community (during the Cultural Revolution)—the Four Olds (target of the Cultural Revolution)—National Treasure (officially designated by the state cultural authorities in China, Japan and Korea)—Evening Rain, 1980 movie about the Cultural revolution—Fenghuang Ancient Town, in Fenghuang County, Xiangxi Prefecture, Hunan, added the UNESCO World Heritage Tentative List in 2008 in the Cultural category—Lin Biao (1908-1971), Chinese army leader at time of the Cultural Revolution—Liu Shaoqi (1898-1969), Chinese communist leader, a martyr of the Cultural Revolution—person in power taking the capitalist road, a political label often pinned on cadres by the Red Guards during the Cultural Revolution—Liangzhu (c. 3400-2250 BC), neolithic culture of Changjiang delta—victory garland (in Greek and western culture)—culture fluid (in biological lab.)—black eggshell pottery (of the Neolithic Longshan culture)—having pretensions culture—spoofing culture (web based genre in PRC acquiring cult status from 2005, involving humorous, satirical or fantastical videos, phocollections, texts, poems etc)—Yangshao culture (archaeological period with red and black pottery)—Yangshao neolithic culture from the central Yellow river basin, with red and black pottery—visit as family representative for purpose of marriage arrangement (traditional culture)—Chinese national culture—Confucius Institute, organization established internationally by the PRC, promoting Chinese language and culture—abbr. for Shandong culture—PRC sports and physical culture commission—Korea, esp. in context of art and culture—sihu (or "khuurchir" in Mongolian), a bowed instrument with four strings, primarily associated with Mongolian and Chinese culture—Tianqiao district in Beijing, formerly a center of folk culture—material and spiritual culture—Zeng Xiaogu (1873-1937), actor and pioneer of Chinese drama in New Culture style—of or relating Flemish people, language or culture—material progress, ideology and culture (philosophic slogan, adopted inDeng Xiaoping theory from 1978)—Ministry of Education, Science and Culture (Japan), ceased exist in 2001 when it was merged with another ministry— |