Yin-Yang: American Perspectives on Living in China

Yin-Yang: American Perspectives on Living in China

Yin-Yang: American Perspectives on Living in China

Yin-Yang: American Perspectives on Living in China

eBook

$36.00 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

China has become one of the largest study and teach-abroad, travel, and business destinations in the world. Yet few books offer a diversity of perspectives and locales for Westerners considering the leap. This unique collection of letters offers a rarely seen, intimate, and refreshingly honest view of living and working in China. Here, ordinary people—recent college graduates, teachers, professors, engineers, lawyers, computer whizzes, and parents— recount their experiences in venues ranging from classrooms to marketplaces to holy mountains. The writers are genuine participants in the daily life of their adopted country, and woven throughout their correspondence is the compelling theme of outsiders coping in a culture that is vastly foreign to them and the underlying love-hate struggle it engenders. We follow their initial highs; the shift to general discomfort and then to full-blown culture shock; and slowly, the return of a sense of balance, identity, and normalcy; and finally, the decision to return home or stay. Written in a down-to-earth, personal, often humorous, always authentic style, these tales of trials, successes, and failures offer invaluable insight into a country that remains endlessly fascinating.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442212718
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 12/16/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Alice Renouf has been the executive director of the Colorado China Council since the late 1970s. Mary Beth Ryan-Maher is a freelance writer who taught in Kunming, China, and co-led the Colorado China Council’s Shanghai Summer Institute for new teachers.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: China Arrival: Settling In Can Be So Unsettling
Chapter 2: Teaching: A Seriously Exhausting Endeavor!
Chapter 3: Cross-Cultural Experiences: Which Side of the Mirror Am I On?
Chapter 4: Day-to-Day Living: Think Chinese, Be Chinese
Chapter 5: Travel: From Shanghai Skyscrapers to the Bamboo Houses of Xishuangbanna
Chapter 6: Families Coping: Babies, Rabies, Scabies, and Flu, No Problem
Chapter 7: Going Home: Manzou, Zhongguo! (Take It Easy, China)
Chapter 8: Epilogue: Looking Back

What People are Saying About This

Jan Berris

This terrific book provides thoughtful and thought-provoking insights into just how overwhelming, rewarding, scary, exciting, lonely, humorous, and enriching it is to be a foreign teacher in China. We are adding it as a must-read, not just for those we send to China as part of our Teacher Exchange Program, but also for those whose dreams take them only as far as the living room couch.

Valerie Hansen

Some of the letters are laugh-out-loud funny; all are intensely real. Reading them in chronological order captures the extraordinary pace of change in China since 1991. And they achieve their goal magnificently: Anyone who reads this book will be fully prepared to face all the challenges of living in China.

Peter Rupert Lighte

The opening line of a letter to Alice speaks volumes: 'we need your sage advice.' The cadre of adventuresome educators crafted by the redoubtable Alice Renouf represent the future of the Sino-American partnership, and it is her vision of who is needed to deliver the goods that makes for the endeavor's success. One thing is for sure: Whenever we take the plunge into China, the moment is unique, and these letters chronicle the experiences of those fortunate enough to have Alice as a lifeline during times that can be had only in China.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews