As Chinese online literature gains increasing popularity worldwide, web novels have become a window for overseas audiences to know about China and learn about the nation's culture.
With Chinese online literature becoming a "global cultural phenomenon", such creators and providers are also rapidly expanding overseas as carriers of culture and empowering writers from across the globe with "dream jobs".
On a winter evening in a warm, clean, and softly lit room in Sanyuanqiao, Beijing, 29-year-old sound therapist Hu Chong played various instruments.
At a recent grand Spring Festival village evening gala in Chongqing's Yongchuan district on Jan 16, the audience was captivated by the Anren Bench Dragon Dance, a form of national intangible cultural heritage from Dazhou, Sichuan province.
Translation of Booker Prize-winning novel Orbital gives Chinese readers a taste of the world as it ought to be, Yang Yang reports.
Guo Nian Shu, or The Book of Chinese New Year, by renowned author Feng Jicai was released by the Writers Publishing House ahead of Spring Festival.
The Kylin Purse film adaptation retains core message of Cheng style, Cheng Yuezhu reports.
The annual Science Fiction New Year Gala organized by the Future Affairs Administration, a company that deals with Sci-fi publications, consulting and filmmaking, marked its 10th year this Spring Festival.
Mahua FunAge, China's most popular comedy brand, recently signed a strategic cooperation letter of intent with Puy du Fou, France's leading theme park brand known for historical and cultural shows, in a bid to strengthen cultural exchanges and promote the development of comedy between the two nations.
With the Year of the Snake arriving, the Legend of the White Snake — a household folklore passed down for more than 1,000 years — serves as a muse of many cultural programs and activities celebrating the Spring Festival holiday.
One Day Three Autumns is the kind of play that's about jokes and telling jokes, but you walk out of the theater with your eyes moist, or the trace of tears on your face.
When scriptwriter Liu Hua visited a remote railway station to collect inspirational material for the TV series Zhu Zhan (Stationed), he was unexpectedly struck by the profound quietness.