Contact Us

 

 

  

Address: Beijing's xizhimen south street, xicheng district

 

The British garden 1 floor. Room 824

 

Zip code: 100035

 

Telephone: 010-58562339

 

Fax: 010-58562339

 

Email address: cngjzj@163.com

 

Web site (click on the url link directly left) :

 

http://www.cngjzj.com/

 

Blog (click on the url link directly left) :

http://blog.sina.com.Cn/CNGJZJ

 

To xizhimen south street, xicheng district building to the British garden route

L airport line 1

Take the airport shuttle from the airport, the dongzhimen station transfer to metro line 2 to xizhimen direction and get off at xizhimen station, from C outbound, go straight to the east 100 meters on the right side to xizhimen south street, north to walk to the t-junction namely to the British garden 1 floor downstairs.

L airport line 2

From the capital airport take airport bus to xidan, get off at no.22, take a taxi to xizhimen south street English garden 1 floor.

L bus subway near:

106 bus GuanYuan: 107 road, express way

Bus: xizhimen south road 387, 44 road, inner ring 800, 816 road, inner ring 820, 845 road

Che zhuang: subway line two

Xizhimen subway: metro line 2

Buses and attempts: 107 road, 118 road, 701 road

Buses and north zhuang: 209 road, 375 road, 392 road

 

Your position is: Home >> newspaper >> newspaper

The New York museum exhibition traces the complex story of Chinese medicine in the United States.

2018年04月28日

复制链接 打印 大 中 小

<

The New York museum exhibition traces the complex story of Chinese medicine in the United States.

In 2018-04-28, the official xinhua news agency


Many aspects of TCM's experience in Chinese immigration reflect the difficult path of American legitimacy and integration.

That's why the American museum of Chinese museum (MOCA) in New York City held two groundbreaking exhibitions on April 26 solstice on September 9, trying to track China's complex medical stories.

"Chinese medicine in the United States: the integration of ideas, people and practice" by medical history cultural relic, contemporary art of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), and introduced an overview of the famous figures in the history of the United States and the practice of traditional Chinese medicine of traditional Chinese medicine of cross-cultural story, for exploring created an attractive space medicine, philosophy and history how together.

Notes Wah Chung&Co. On the shelf: General Store and Apothecary John dell, Oregon is an immersive historical exhibition, celebrate Ing "Doc" Hay medical practice, he became famous in eastern Oregon after the California gold rush.

Through Chinese medicine

"I think it's important to celebrate the culture and history of Chinese americans through Chinese medicine," Donna Mah, a teacher at New York's Pacific eastern medical school, told xinhua at a news conference Wednesday.

"We are really trying to piece together a prism to light up the light of Chinese medicine, and let the Chinese culture and history in beautiful rainbow on the wall," exhibition of the guest curator Mach said.

"By looking at how we treat disease and staying healthy, we want visitors to understand the old philosophical concept of being a backbone of Chinese culture," said Herb Tam, curator and exhibition director at MOCA.

So far, only four U.S. states have no legislation on the practice of Chinese medicine. It has grown into an industry of 40,000 licensed therapists, treating more than 380 million patients a year.

However, it wasn't until the 1970s that practicing acupuncture in the United States could put you in jail.

This happened at the home of a therapist in palo alto, California, who treated the patient, Miriam lee. She was arrested in 1974 for unlicensed practice, but many of her patients appeared in her trials to prove the benefits of acupuncture.

A few days later, the governor, Ronald Reagan, legalized acupuncture as an experimental procedure, and officially legalized it in the sun in 1976.

In 2009, when she died in southern California, where she retired, she chronicled her experience in a 1992 book, "the insights of a senior acupuncturist."