Beijing has offered a total of 20 million yuan (about $2.9 million) to the cinemas in the city to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on their business, local authorities said Wednesday.
URUMQI-What was life like for soldiers 1,200 years ago? How did they guard the border? What did they do after work and how did they escape the summer heat? A recent excavation project in Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region may partly answer these questions.
The Chinese Learning Seminar, organized by the China Culture Center in Wellington and the city government, reopened on July 31, 2020.
Eight years after being entitled a Nobel laureate in literature, Mo Yan came back with his latest book A Late Bloomer in late July.
Emperor Qinshihuang's Mausoleum Site Museum, known for its famous army of terracotta warriors, has received nearly 20,000 tourists per day during the peak season of the summer vacation and the waning COVID-19 epidemic.
The gods of fortune, prosperity and longevity have been smiling on the band Fulushou this summer. Considering that is exactly what the group's name means, it's perhaps no surprise.
The photo album The Grand Canal depicts the fate of a group of people living on both sides of the canal since the 1960s.
Unity of Strength, an ongoing exhibition at the National Museum of China, shows that despite not working on the frontline to battle COVID-19, artists spare no effort to document the heroic deeds of those that did, hailing their great contribution to the cause.
Now running on Shanghai-based Dragon TV and streaming site Tencent Video, the 43-episode drama that examines the challenges and confusion faced by women in their 30s, has made a big splash online.
Chinese Bridge, a worldwide Chinese language contest for university students, drew the curtains on its divisional competition in Pakistan.
The China Cultural Center in Tel Aviv launched an online exhibition of Li Shaobai's Imperial Palace photography on July 29.
To transform a cluster of abandoned mines into a lush forest park, veteran-turned-businessman Zhang Junping from Taiyuan in North China's Shanxi province has endured much hardship and sacrifice over the past decade.