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For centuries, folks in Jiangyou City had only one claim to fame. They lived in the hometown of one of China's most famous poets, an eighth-century ...
Li Bai, an 8th-century Chinese poet, is played by Dimei Wu, a second-year bioengineering student. In the sword dance ''Bring in the Wine,'' Li Bai expresses his anger.
In 724 A.D., the twenty-three-year-old poet Li Bai got on a boat and set out from his home region of Shu, today’s Sichuan province, in search of Daoist learnings and a political career.
If the name Li Bai means little in the West, the Tang Dynasty poet stands as tall in the Chinese cultural consciousness as William Shakespeare does in the English- speaking world. Long a fan of ...
Triumph and turmoil. Success and sorrow. Pleasure and pain. Li Bai confronted these peaks and valleys and more in a bountiful, multifaceted life that took him across China, cast him into exile and ...
On December 28, a captivating new media art exhibition on Chinese ancient poetry debuted at China Millennium Monument in Beijing. Created by leading artists, including the Academy of Fine Arts of ...
Li Bai is a household name in China as Shakespeare to the UK or Tagore to India. He lived between 701 and 762, also a golden age of Chinese poetry, and his poems are brimful of patriotism and ...
In Li Ronghao’s song 'Li Bai,' we are presented with a satirical portrayal of an artist. The one who believes themselves a misunderstood genius, harboring disdain for the common unrefined ways ...
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