News

In the Mood for Love (花樣年華) is a 2000 Hong Kong film directed by Wong Kar-wai, starring Maggie Cheung and Tony Leung. It premiered on 20 May 2000, at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival… ...
Interview with Vivian Ling on translating Love Without Borders, covering adoption, identity, and the political and personal ...
Debra Liu traces Daoist ritual, ordination, and sacred mountain life from Brisbane to Beijing in Into the Mountains, published by Earnshaw Books.
T.A. Morton discusses myth, Taoism, and anonymity in her novel The Coffee Shop Masquerade, set in contemporary Hong Kong.
Explore Emily Cheng's large-scale radial paintings, visually integrating radiant color, global cultures, gravity, and philosophical themes.
Bonan Li is an independent fashion designer, who pursued education at the Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology and furthered fashion studies at Parsons The New School. She has a variety of ...
Staceyann Chin reflects on writing, identity, performance, activism, and the complexities of family, history, and resistance.
Sculptor Haige Wu intertwines feminism and heritage using traditional crafts and contemporary materials to build tactile, abstract narratives.
Continental influence beyond the British presence in the city’s institutional history Mark O’Neill is a British journalist and author whose work focuses on Asian affairs, with particular emphasis on ...
Twelve exclusive interviews in Planet China 17 highlight women’s voices on gender equality, leadership, and progress for International Women’s Day 2025.
China Remembers is an oral history compilation by Lijia Zhang and Calum MacLeod that offers an intimate and multifaceted account of the first fifty years of the People’s Republic of China (1949–1999).
Lijia Zhang’s Socialism Is Great! tells the story of a factory worker’s defiance, China’s shifting economy, and the 1989 pro-democracy movement.