The Girl at the Baggage Claim
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Timely and extremely important . . . In this book Gish Jen has once again taken the universal and made it personal, and vice versa . . . She is uniquely suited to explore this topic. -Lisa See, The Washington Post Wise, impeccably researched, beautifully written, and vitally important . . . Gish Jen brings a novelist's understanding heart and a scholar's appreciation to her new book on the cultural differences between East and West, and a sympathetic perspective of someone who has been both an insider and an outsider in both. -Nell Minow, The Huffington Post I loved the book! A deep psychological examination of how place, habits, and identity mix in our world. Tremendous! -Yo-Yo Ma Fascinating . . . Rich with examples of the contrast between Asian Society and our own. . . . She is onto something that the typical American may become aware of as we bump into people unlike ourselves-from other cultures, not limited to Asians. -Repps Hudson, St. Louis Post-Dispatch A fascinating, brilliant book that gripped me from page one. Subtle, erudite, and daring, The Girl at the Baggage Claim is a tour de force by one of the most insightful writers of our time. -Amy Chua, the John M. Duff Jr. Professor of Law at Yale Law School, and author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother [Turns] a study of culture and psychology into an engaging narrative. Whether in commerce, diplomacy, or travel, readers can take away memorable insights into how identity and context shape worldviews. -Linda Levitt, Popmatters Jen holds up a comprehensive and scholarly mirror to both worldviews-and be warned: Her mirror is honest, and at times provocative. -Deborah Mason, BookPage I honestly can't overstate how fascinating I found this book. It's shaken (in the best possible way) some of my basic assumptions about being a Self. -Jason Gots, producer of Big Think An excellent and engaging read, certain to appeal to readers interested in cross-cultural communication, cognitive science, and the experience of Asian Americans in the United States. -Rebecca Brody, Library Journal (starred review) [Jen] articulates the complexities of culture with a novelist's command of language in this rich exploration of the East- West culture gap. - Publishers Weekly Insightful, far-reaching and a joy to read, Gish Jen takes on the mystery of cultural difference, and succeeds in cracking the code. The Girl at the Baggage Claim answered questions I've been asking my whole life. -David Henry Hwang, playwright of M. Butterfly I honestly can't overstate how fascinating I found this book. It's shaken (in the best possible way) some of my basic assumptions about being a Self. -Jason Gots, producer of Big Think This book gives special proof to the belief that our best novelists are also our best psychologists. With characteristic wit and unfailing insight, Gish Jen creates a genre all her own-uniquely universal, deeply serious, and unselfconsciously joyous. -Maryanne Wolf, the John DiBiaggio Professor of Citizenship and Public Service at Tufts University, and author of Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain What a delightful exploration of ideas about how culture affects notions of the self. In her trademark lively and witty prose, Gish Jen not only limns non-Western views of the self but questions whether the Western self is really a natural way to be. A powerful, provocative work. -Michael Puett, the Walter C. Klein Professor of Chinese History at Harvard University, and author of The Path: What Chinese Philosophers Can Teach Us About the Good Life. Gish Jen draws on personal experience, interviews with experts, and her astute reading of both literature and social science to illuminate the crucial question of self in culture. Misunderstanding East-West differences can cost us in every way we know how to measure: in money, friendship, education, in the balance of power, and the fate of the planet. Th
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The Girl at the Baggage Claim, Jen Gish
- Sprache
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2017
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- Titel
- The Girl at the Baggage Claim
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Autor*innen
- Jen Gish
- Verlag
- Bantam Books
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2017
- Einband
- Paperback
- ISBN10
- 152471111X
- ISBN13
- 9781524711115
- Kategorie
- Nicht klassifiziert
- Beschreibung
- Timely and extremely important . . . In this book Gish Jen has once again taken the universal and made it personal, and vice versa . . . She is uniquely suited to explore this topic. -Lisa See, The Washington Post Wise, impeccably researched, beautifully written, and vitally important . . . Gish Jen brings a novelist's understanding heart and a scholar's appreciation to her new book on the cultural differences between East and West, and a sympathetic perspective of someone who has been both an insider and an outsider in both. -Nell Minow, The Huffington Post I loved the book! A deep psychological examination of how place, habits, and identity mix in our world. Tremendous! -Yo-Yo Ma Fascinating . . . Rich with examples of the contrast between Asian Society and our own. . . . She is onto something that the typical American may become aware of as we bump into people unlike ourselves-from other cultures, not limited to Asians. -Repps Hudson, St. Louis Post-Dispatch A fascinating, brilliant book that gripped me from page one. Subtle, erudite, and daring, The Girl at the Baggage Claim is a tour de force by one of the most insightful writers of our time. -Amy Chua, the John M. Duff Jr. Professor of Law at Yale Law School, and author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother [Turns] a study of culture and psychology into an engaging narrative. Whether in commerce, diplomacy, or travel, readers can take away memorable insights into how identity and context shape worldviews. -Linda Levitt, Popmatters Jen holds up a comprehensive and scholarly mirror to both worldviews-and be warned: Her mirror is honest, and at times provocative. -Deborah Mason, BookPage I honestly can't overstate how fascinating I found this book. It's shaken (in the best possible way) some of my basic assumptions about being a Self. -Jason Gots, producer of Big Think An excellent and engaging read, certain to appeal to readers interested in cross-cultural communication, cognitive science, and the experience of Asian Americans in the United States. -Rebecca Brody, Library Journal (starred review) [Jen] articulates the complexities of culture with a novelist's command of language in this rich exploration of the East- West culture gap. - Publishers Weekly Insightful, far-reaching and a joy to read, Gish Jen takes on the mystery of cultural difference, and succeeds in cracking the code. The Girl at the Baggage Claim answered questions I've been asking my whole life. -David Henry Hwang, playwright of M. Butterfly I honestly can't overstate how fascinating I found this book. It's shaken (in the best possible way) some of my basic assumptions about being a Self. -Jason Gots, producer of Big Think This book gives special proof to the belief that our best novelists are also our best psychologists. With characteristic wit and unfailing insight, Gish Jen creates a genre all her own-uniquely universal, deeply serious, and unselfconsciously joyous. -Maryanne Wolf, the John DiBiaggio Professor of Citizenship and Public Service at Tufts University, and author of Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain What a delightful exploration of ideas about how culture affects notions of the self. In her trademark lively and witty prose, Gish Jen not only limns non-Western views of the self but questions whether the Western self is really a natural way to be. A powerful, provocative work. -Michael Puett, the Walter C. Klein Professor of Chinese History at Harvard University, and author of The Path: What Chinese Philosophers Can Teach Us About the Good Life. Gish Jen draws on personal experience, interviews with experts, and her astute reading of both literature and social science to illuminate the crucial question of self in culture. Misunderstanding East-West differences can cost us in every way we know how to measure: in money, friendship, education, in the balance of power, and the fate of the planet. Th