Twenty years ago, a group of college students sat quietly at the entrance to the Great Hall of the people and raised a poster with seven demands:
- One: Reevaluate the achievements and errors of Hu Yaobang and affirm his standpoints on democracy, freedom, relaxing , and harmony.
- Two: Thoroughly negate and eliminate "spiritual...
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Tags: Controversy, History, June 4th Incident
Posted in History, Translations | 3 Comments »
They're called "Little Emperors" -- children whose experience has been shaped by the twin forces of increasing financial prosperity and the Chinese government policy dictating that they are only children -- and the first real generation of them is coming of age. They are arguably the richest and best-educated generation of Chinese ever. So...
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Tags: Education, Reform, Suicide
Posted in Culture | No Comments »
Part II: Hauntings.
As long as people have been around there have been reports of ghosts. Indeed, Chinese culture has a long and rich history of belief in otherworldly spirits, especially the spirits of the dead, and the ways they affect the living. These days, many people (Westerners and Chinese) have written off these traditional...
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Tags: Ghosts, paranormal
Posted in Culture, Translations | 3 Comments »
On March 10, New Publication Section Chief Liu Binjie said in an interview with the media, "when compared with the international media, the weakness of Chinese media is mostly systemic. In the past, under then planned economic system, the media was a department of the press, set up by press administration officials, and did...
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Tags: Chinese Media, Links, Western Media
Posted in Links, Translations | 10 Comments »
As you can read in today’s New York Times, fascination with a “mythical” creature is the latest internet meme to go mainstream in China. That creature? The Grass Mud Horse. Ostensibly, the Grass Mud Horse is an alpaca-like creature that lives in the Ma Le Desert and fights River Crabs. In actuality, though, the...
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Tags: Censorship, Internet
Posted in Culture, Translations | 6 Comments »
Today is March 10, the much-discussed anniversary of the 1959 Tibetan Uprising. ChinaGeeks has reported repeatedly on the security buildup leading up the anniversary, as have many other sources, but so far, there’s no sign of any major protest activity. If there were, it would be quite a surprise given the security presence there,...
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Tags: Links, Tibet
Posted in Current Events, Links | 1 Comment »
Perhaps the most frustrating thing about living in China as a foreigner interested in understanding China is just how difficult it can be to get access to anything real. We laowai tend to stick to the cities, and even when we don’t, we are constantly aware that those around us and speaking with us...
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Tags: Films, Sichuan Earthquake
Posted in Film Reviews, Links | No Comments »
Everyone’s talking about the upcoming 50-year anniversary of the Lhasa uprising and whether something will happen. (OK, by everyone, I mean us). One guy who thinks something will happen? The Dalai Lama (h/t Fool’s Mountain). In an interview with a German newspaper, the exiled Tibetan leader said of the upcoming anniversary, “I am very...
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Tags: Dalai Lama, Tibet
Posted in Current Events | 7 Comments »
Wang Hongzhe thinks so. The Chinese netizen (going online by the name RNAmonkey) recently conducted a little experiment to see whether Chinese people would pay more attention to a foreign critical voice than a domestic one, and subsequently discussed his results with The New Yorker‘s Evan Osnos. His conclusion? Yes. Wang wrote an article...
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Tags: Shanzhai
Posted in Culture | 11 Comments »
It appears the Chinese government is taking no chances with the upcoming anniversary of last year’s unrest in Tibet and other Tibetan ethnic regions. The New York Times is reporting that the authorities have imposed an unofficial state of martial law on the vast highlands where ethnic Tibetans live, with thousands of troops occupying...
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Tags: Great Firewall, Tibet
Posted in Current Events | 10 Comments »