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      • Bardon-Chinese Media Agency

        Bardon-Chinese Media Agency licenses European, USA, and Japanese copyrights including academic and trade titles and children books in Chinese language markets. The agency promotes, negotiates and licenses Chinese translation for publications, serializations, permissions, co-production and its derivative rights in form of exhibitions, performances and merchandising on behalf of its clients worldwide. The agency vice versa is handling foreign rights of Chinese original writings on behalf of some prominent Chinese authors or outstanding works. As a local agency specializing in Chinese speaking territories, the agency takes pride in matchmaking numerous translation titles to become million bestsellers in China. The agency facilitates an professional and well experienced crew to consistently monitor and collect the sales reports and following royalty payments of all deals. The agency is widely regarded as one of the Chinese leading literary agencies with its professional and objective knowledge of the market and publishing houses.

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      • Biography & True Stories
        October 2019

        A Sensational Encounter with High Socialist China

        by Paul G. PICKOWICZ

        A Sensational Encounter with High Socialist China is a recollection of the historic visit of fourteen American students (and one Canadian) to China in 1971. The visit was one of the first approved for American scholars after the Chinese Communist Party came to power in 1949 and occurred prior to President Nixon’s famous trip (as well as that of a second group of scholars) in 1972. One of these students, Paul Pickowicz, kept a journal and photographically documented the trip. This book is a personal account of the events leading up to their visa approvals as well as those that occurred during the journey itself. The five senses are used to connect the reader to his experience and are placed in the context of a theatrical production. The images included have been selected from an archive at the University of California, San Diego, which digitized the author’s images as well as those of others in the Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars (CCAS) taken during both the 1971 and 1972 delegations.

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