North China

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    popular stereotype of the Chinese and Japanese people being rash and unloving. "Dreaming of Li Po" by Tu Fu, "Analects" by Confucious, Tanka Poetry, and "Fish Cheeks" by Amy Tan, prove these statements to be untrue. They impact our perceptions of China and Japan into ones of stark human emotions that everyone around the world can relate to.…

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    On March 29, 1974, at Xi’an in China, three local farmers were digging a well in hopes to find water, but instead broke into a pit that contained 6000 Terracotta figures. This was only one of the pits that they had found until an excavation started in 1976, which revealed two more pits of Terracotta Warriors. This is now known as the Terracotta Army, which I think is a wonderful historic mystery for a young adult (teen) -action, mystery, romance etc.- novel. Than my other studied Historical…

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    based off of the world’s first civilizations. These regions were similar due to the fact that China accepted the new religion of Buddhism while Rome accepted the new idea of Christianity, as well as how the men in China were the heads of their families while male citizens in Rome had control over their wives, children, and slaves. On the other hand, the fact that Rome was first governed by patricians while China was governed by emperors set the two regions apart. The belief systems of the…

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    Although the early post classical Silk Road and sub-Saharan trade routes were both very political trade routes, they had differences such as their level of exposure and outside influences and the cultural differences along the trade routes like musical rituals for Sub-Sahara and artisan goods on the Silk Road. Both the Sub-Saharan and Silk Road trade routes had significant political involvement in their trading economies. The Sub-Saharan trade route was the basis of the economy and politics in…

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    In my CASPA personal statement, I wrote about my parents, who are my role models and inspiration for pursuing a career in the medical field. They were immigrants from China and taught me Chinese, my first language. When I was a child, I spoke almost exclusively in Chinese until I started preschool. After I started school, I worked diligently to improve my English. Years of hard work paid off and I became fluent in English but, unfortunately, my Chinese language skills diminished. Because my…

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    Rome, the peasants going to landowners for protection because they weren’t obligated to pay taxes affected commerce by making the taxes rise, resulting in inflation. Peasants during this became infuriated with the rise in taxes and began to rebel in China. In Rome officials struggled to eradicate religion during this time. Nomads attacked the peripheries of…

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    Brooklyn’s Chinatown also known as 8th Avenue by current residents, is one of the most widespread growing areas populated with Chinese immigrants. It is also known as Little Fuzhou mainly due to the immigrants from Fujian, a province in the mainland of China. Rapidly growing in population, immigrants from Fujian are spreading to areas between the boroughs of Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens, drawing away the original Cantonese residents with many concerns of the discriminations brought upon the…

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    In Ancient China power and social rank correlated with land ownership. The lowest classes of people owned little or no land and share cropped on the land of more powerful people. This is also why Chinese societies did not like merchants, because of their lack of land. In China the Confucian ideal of filial piety and the five relationships influenced the social classes, with the five relationships…

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    Kingston’s mother uses the celebration of Fa Mu Lan’s return from war to teach Kingston how to become a perfect Chinese woman warrior who fights modern day injustice. After being criticised for being a girl while seeing the boys get praised, Kingston tries her best to be like a boy. Kingston points out, ”I went away to college- Berkeley in the sixties- and I studied, and I marched to change the world, but I did not turn into a boy. I would have liked to bring myself back as a boy for my parents…

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    Chinese American Assimilation Struggles America is often referred to as a melting pot, rich with culture that combines together to make one united country, but Amy Tan and many other Chinese Americans come to realize that the melting process is very difficult. Chinese American’s complete assimilation into the American culture can be near impossible with so many hardships. Their assimilation struggles include embarrassment, staying true to the family, and trying to blend the unique Chinese…

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