“Main Page”的版本间的差异
来自China Digital Space
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*[[digital disobedience]] | *[[digital disobedience]] | ||
*[[I can't, I don't understand]] | *[[I can't, I don't understand]] | ||
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*'''[[Grass-Mud Horse Lexicon: Pinyin Index|More...]]''' | *'''[[Grass-Mud Horse Lexicon: Pinyin Index|More...]]''' | ||
2020年6月19日 (五) 13:38的版本
The Grass-Mud Horse Lexicon is a glossary of memes, nicknames, and neologisms created by Chinese netizens and encountered in online political discussions. The project is named in honor of the grass-mud horse (cǎonímǎ 草泥马), whose name sounds nearly the same in Mandarin as a vile curse and has become the de facto mascot of Chinese Internet users. Netizens use coded language to avoid outright censorship, and to allude to their desire for freedom of information and expression. They possess boundless creativity and ingenuity in the face of stifling government restrictions on online speech. By systematically documenting and interpreting the dynamics of censorship, domination, and resistance in Chinese communication and information networks, the Grass-Mud Horse Lexicon aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of the Internet's cultural, social, and political impact. Jump to #About the Lexicon to learn more.
You can #Browse by Category below, or look up specific terms in the Pinyin Index. Check out our ebook of essential grass-mud horse language, available in PDF for pay-what-you-want (all proceeds support CDT).
Latest Entries
We're adding entries on propaganda and resistance discourse during the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Some of our favorites are listed here.
- Personal Emperor
- bureaucravirus
- digital disobedience
- I can't, I don't understand
- everything is fake
- More...
Browse by Category
Browse a selection of lexicon entries by category.
Grass-Mud Horse Ecosystem
A menagerie of netizens' imagination, created to skirt censorship and decry injustice.
Party and State
Leaders, government agencies, and corrupt cadres.
Censorship and Propaganda
State media, Internet censorship, and choice words from officials.
Health and Environment
Pollution, food safety scandals, and other health hazards.
Society and Culture
Pop culture and everyday life.
Resistance Discourse
Sarcasm, circumvention, and real-world action.
Rule and Law
Encounters with the law and law enforcement.
Corruption
Bribery and ill-gotten gains at all levels of government.
Disasters
Natural and man-made.
Pinyin Index
Complete list of entries in pinyin order.
About the Lexicon
Origin of the Grass-Mud Horse
In early 2009, a creature called the grass-mud horse debuted in an music video that became an viral hit. The "grass-mud horse" (cǎonímǎ 草泥马), whose name sounds nearly the same as "fuck your mother" (cào nǐ mā 肏你妈), was created to get around government censorship of vulgar content. The dopey alpaca rose to Chinese Internet stardom, its symbolism transforming along the way. Within weeks, the grass-mud horse became the de facto mascot of Chinese netizens fighting for free expression, inspiring poetry, photos, videos, artwork, clothing, and more. As one Chinese blogger explained, "The grass-mud horse represents information and opinions that cannot be accepted by the mainstream discourse, and the 'Song of the Grass-Mud Horse' has become a metaphor of the power struggle over Internet expression."
The grass-mud horse is particularly suited to the contested space of the Chinese Internet. The government's pervasive and intrusive censorship system has generated equally massive resentment among Chinese netizens. As a result, new forms of social resistance and demands for greater freedom of information and expression are often expressed in coded language and implicit metaphors, which allow them to avoid outright censorship. The Internet has become a quasi-public space where the CCP’s dominance is being constantly exposed, ridiculed, and criticized, often in the form of political satire, jokes, drawings, videos, songs, popular poetry, jingles, fiction, sci-fi, code words, mockery, and euphemisms.
Chinese netizens have shown they possess boundless creativity and ingenuity in finding ways to express themselves despite stifling government restrictions on online speech. Without understanding this coded but widespread "grass-mud horse discourse" through the lens of censorship and resistance, one cannot fully understand the contradictions in Chinese society today, nor the possibilities for tomorrow.
To the uninitiated, even those who can read Chinese, this coded language can be confounding. But to Chinese netizens, the terms often resonate deeply by expressing feelings about shared experiences that millions of people can immediately relate to. Despite their subversive beginnings, many of the terms have already become mainstream; a few have even been added to the authoritative Oxford Chinese Dictionary.
Building the Lexicon
All of the terms in the Lexicon were invented by netizens and circulated widely on websites inside China, not just by prominent bloggers or opinion leaders. For many of the terms, one cannot identify the original author or how exactly it originated. China Digital Times selects these terms from a variety of sources. We discovered many from a self-initiated online project of Chinese bloggers to select for the "words of the year in Chinese blogosphere." Others come from mainstream publications such as Southern Metropolis Daily or even the state-run Xinhua News Service, as well as from Chinese forums, Sina Weibo, and other microblogging platforms. The direct participation of Chinese netizens also yielded many terms after China Digital Times' Chinese site made the call for submissions public in June 2010.
The selected terms are not a complete recording of pop culture and online terminology. Rather, the China Digital Times editors have focused exclusively on politically-charged terms which represent netizen resistance discourse. These are not necessarily "sensitive" keywords, which have been documented elsewhere by China Digital Times and other projects, nor are they part of the "legitimizing discourse," used by people who actively defend and support government policy or willingly to cooperate with the regime, including nationalists. At times, some of these words may be put on individual websites' "sensitive lists" or blocked outright, but in general they are popular daily lingo for Chinese netizens.
The current list is by no means exhaustive, and new words are being created daily. But we hope this list will provide a glimpse into online political discourse and make it more accessible to non-Chinese readers.
How You Can Help
This is an ongoing open source collaborative translation program with submissions from volunteers and professional translators. What is currently published is just a seed that we hope to expand upon in coming months and years. If you are interested in participating in this project by submitting and/or translating terms, please contact our editors.
China Digital Times would like to express deep gratitude for the extraordinary work of our primary translator, who wishes to remain anonymous, and to Liz Carter for updating and expanding the entries.