New journal stirs interest in Chinese culture
Shuyee Chen
Chinese Culture Quarterly, launched 27 June by City University's Chinese Civilisation Centre (CCIV), is an academic journal designed to promote research and ongoing discussion of various aspects of Chinese culture among scholars worldwide.
"Many people say that Hong Kong is a cultural desert," said Professor Cheng at the opening ceremony. "What I've seen, however, is that it is more an oasis. A cultural project such as this new quarterly would not likely happen elsewhere.”
, the President of City University, also spoke at the launch of the publication. He noted that Hong Kong people are now, as never before, trying very hard to seek ways to build a closer economic partnership with the mainland and that the new quarterly can serve as a model of such cooperation. "We hope that, through this cooperative initiative, a healthy and constructive example will be set for Hong Kong's business sector." (Professor H K Chang referred to the journal once again when he addressed a question to Premier Wen Jianbao on 29 June; this Q & A session appeared in several local newspapers.)
In addition to the Chinese Cultural Quarterly, the evening also saw the CCIV unveil an exhibition in celebration of its fifth anniversary. Established in 1998, the CCIV is an independent teaching unit set up to develop and implement Chinese civilization courses for CityU's undergraduate students. The exhibition, from 28 June through 3 July 2003, will showcase the CCIV's history, programmes, research projects and publications.