Photo: Untitled (Huanglong National Park, Sichuan), by Franco Pecchio
Untitled (Huanglong National Park, Sichuan), by Franco Pecchio (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Read Moreby Cindy Carter | Jul 12, 2023
Untitled (Huanglong National Park, Sichuan), by Franco Pecchio (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Read Moreby Cindy Carter | Jul 12, 2023
On July 7, the Chinese Quora-like Q&A site Zhihu announced that users will no longer be able to post questions and answers anonymously. For existing content posted anonymously, users will be able to choose whether to keep it...
Read Moreby Alexander Boyd | Jul 12, 2023
“Bridge builder” is normally a high compliment. For one family in Jilin province, however, bridge-building earned them charges of “picking quarrels and provoking trouble,” setting off another national debate about the...
Read Moreby Cindy Carter | Jul 6, 2023
Barbie Store, by Mr Michael Phams (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Read Moreby Alexander Boyd | Jul 6, 2023
On the surface, neither the film “Barbie” nor a write-up of an academic’s research on migrant laborer poverty would seem to have anything to do with the South China Sea. Yet both are embroiled in censorship controversies related...
Read Moreby Cindy Carter | Jul 5, 2023
Less than a month after the conclusion of China’s hypercompetitive annual university entrance examination (“gaokao”), a satirical meme about an imaginary university has been banned on Weibo. The meme and its censorship reveal...
Read Moreby Cindy Carter | Jul 3, 2023
Love Locks, Huangshan, by Aaron May (CC BY-ND 2.0)
Read Moreby Cindy Carter | Jul 3, 2023
A new draft patriotic education law submitted last week to the National People’s Congress Standing Committee is spurring spirited online debate. Broad in scope, the draft law includes provisions for the role of Chinese...
Read Moreby Alexander Boyd | Jul 3, 2023
The accounts of Health Insights (@八点健闻), a health and science-oriented digital news outlet, have been suspended across all Chinese social media platforms, notably WeChat and Weibo. Since coming online in 2019, the outlet had...
Read Moreby Cindy Carter | Jun 29, 2023
The Fluttering Fishing Nets, by Henry So (CC BY-ND 2.0)
Read Moreby Alexander Boyd | Jun 29, 2023
Toys riffing on China’s hottest online idiom, “calling a rat a duck,” were yanked from online shelves this past week, a sign of the idiom’s continued political sensitivity. The tongue-in-cheek saying “calling a rat a duck”...
Read Moreby Arthur Kaufman | Jun 29, 2023
Over the past few weeks, several think tanks have published reports evaluating the expansion and success of China’s external propaganda. Together, they show the wide range of tools, targets, mediums, and regions involved in...
Read Moreby Alexander Boyd | Jun 28, 2023
“I don’t raise pigs” (我不养猪 wǒ bù yǎng zhū), a Hunan police station’s nonsensical comment on the death of a woman in their custody, is the latest incidence of “gobsmacking rhetoric” (léi yǔ 雷语) to go viral. “Gobsmacking rhetoric”...
Read Moreby Cindy Carter | Jun 28, 2023
An antiquated Chinese political phrase enjoyed a brief revival when it was dusted off and used by some online commentators to describe the series of events known variously as the “Wagner Group...
Read Moreby Cindy Carter | Jun 27, 2023
福州-西湖, by Jinning Zhang (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Read More