Visitors to this bbs mentioned 韩寒. I was unaware of anything about him or
her--and had no interest to know.
Then a major American newspaper featured him in Saturday Profile--a column
that appears every Saturday.
Andrew Jacobs, Heartthrob’s Blog Challenges China’s Leaders. New York
Times, Mar. 13, 2010.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/world/asia/13hanhan.html?scp=1&sq=%22han%20han%22&st=cse
I was thinking, "Hmm, this guy is handsome." (Well, American men have warned
me in the first quarter--my university at the time had quarter system which
was soon dropped in favor of semester--not to describe a fellow man this
way, for my own good. But I as always do not listen to others.)
To date, I have not read any of his blogs.
(2) You are not the first one to predict his downfall. See, e.g.,
My problem with this style of Chinese literature is I was not born or raised
in China, nor did I live before. I simply cannot comprehend--nor have I
heard of--many things(and phrases) 朱學勤 says or quotes in this pair of
articles. First and foremost, I hardly believe Chairman Mao referenced "mice
" in his poem. As I invariably feel, China--and Chinese--are as alien to me
as Mars and its inhabitants.
Visitors to this bbs mentioned 韩寒. I was unaware of anything about him or
her--and had no interest to know.
Then a major American newspaper featured him in Saturday Profile--a column
that appears every Saturday.
Andrew Jacobs, Heartthrob’s Blog Challenges China’s Leaders. New York
Times, Mar. 13, 2010.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/world/asia/13hanhan.html?scp=1&sq=%22han%20han%22&st=cse
I was thinking, "Hmm, this guy is handsome." (Well, American men have warned
me in the first quarter--my university at the time had quarter system which
was soon dropped in favor of semester--not to describe a fellow man this
way, for my own good. But I as always do not listen to others.)
To date, I have not read any of his blogs.
(2) You are not the first one to predict his downfall. See, e.g.,
My problem with this style of Chinese literature is I was not born or raised
in China, nor did I live before. I simply cannot comprehend--nor have I
heard of--many things(and phrases) 朱學勤 says or quotes in this pair of
articles. First and foremost, I hardly believe Chairman Mao referenced "mice
" in his poem. As I invariably feel, China--and Chinese--are as alien to me
as Mars and its inhabitants.