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<h3>唐映红</h3>
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==Táng Yìnghóng [[唐映红]]==
  
[[File:Tang-yinghong.jpeg|250px|thumb|right|''Tang Yinghong. (Source: Weibo)'']]
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[[File:Tang-yinghong.jpeg|250px|thumb|right|''Tang Yinghong (Weibo)'']]
  
Columnist and pop-psychologist Tang Yinghong employs his wide-ranging knowledge—and his public WeChat account—to analyze a host of social phenomenon in China: the mass appeal of the pollution documentary "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/03/tang-yinghong-chai-jings-dome-went-viral/ Under the Dome]," public indifference over the switch to a "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/11/sensitive-words-the-two-child-policy/ Two-Child Policy]," and [http://english.caixin.com/2014-07-28/100709835.html foreign fast food companies' many scandals] in China, to name a few. He is a prolific critic of China's social and political situation.
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Columnist and pop-psychologist Tang Yinghong employs his wide-ranging knowledge—and his public WeChat account—to analyze a host of social phenomenon in China: the [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/03/tang-yinghong-chai-jings-dome-went-viral/ mass appeal of the pollution documentary "Under the Dome,"] public "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/11/sensitive-words-the-two-child-policy/ indifference over the switch to a Two-Child Policy]," and [http://english.caixin.com/2014-07-28/100709835.html foreign fast food companies' many scandals] in China, to name a few. He is a prolific critic of China's social and political situation.
  
 
Tang is a native of Leshan, Sichuan Province, a prefecture-level city and home to the [http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/779l largest Buddha in the world]. He studied engineering at Chongqing University, then went on to earn his master's degree in psychology from Beijing Normal University. He has worked at the [http://english.nies.net.cn/ National Institute of Education Sciences] and in the private sector. The author of several educational texts, Tang is currently on faculty in the School of Education Sciences at Leshan Normal University, as well as a columnist for Tencent's online magazine [http://dajia.qq.com/author_personal.htm#!/237 Dajia].
 
Tang is a native of Leshan, Sichuan Province, a prefecture-level city and home to the [http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/779l largest Buddha in the world]. He studied engineering at Chongqing University, then went on to earn his master's degree in psychology from Beijing Normal University. He has worked at the [http://english.nies.net.cn/ National Institute of Education Sciences] and in the private sector. The author of several educational texts, Tang is currently on faculty in the School of Education Sciences at Leshan Normal University, as well as a columnist for Tencent's online magazine [http://dajia.qq.com/author_personal.htm#!/237 Dajia].
  
A prolific producer of "self-media" ([[自媒体]]), Tang brings the perspectives of psychology and history to current affairs. He explains the virality of [[Chai Jing]]'s exposé on air pollution "Under the Dome" as an instance of the "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/03/tang-yinghong-chai-jings-dome-went-viral/ liberating effect of conformity]" (also known as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioral_contagion behavioral contagion]). The patriotic girl band 56 Flowers, Tang writes, exemplifies the power of positive association and the [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2016/05/tang-yinghong-social-psychology-56-flowers/ totemization of "innocent young girls,"] a practice familiar from the former Soviet Union and Nazi Germany. He calls out the Chinese government's hypocrisy in combating smog by quoting reports on capitalist-fueled pollution from People's Daily in 1971. "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2017/01/tang-yinghong-age-smog/ We will only be able to ameliorate smog by reining in greed]," Tang warns.
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A prolific producer of "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2014/03/beijings-propaganda-crisis-rise-self-media/ self-media]" (''zì méitǐ'' [[自媒体]]), Tang brings the perspectives of psychology and history to current affairs. He explains the virality of [[Chai Jing]]'s exposé on air pollution "Under the Dome" as an instance of the "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/03/tang-yinghong-chai-jings-dome-went-viral/ liberating effect of conformity]" (also known as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioral_contagion behavioral contagion]). The [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2016/05/beijing-concert-evokes-cultural-revolution-draws-controversy/ patriotic girl band 56 Flowers], Tang writes, exemplifies the power of positive association and the [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2016/05/tang-yinghong-social-psychology-56-flowers/ totemization of "innocent young girls,"] a practice familiar from the former Soviet Union and Nazi Germany. He calls out the Chinese government's hypocrisy in combating smog by quoting reports on capitalist-fueled pollution from People's Daily in 1971. "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2017/01/tang-yinghong-age-smog/ We will only be able to ameliorate smog by reining in greed]," Tang warns.
  
Archives of Tang's public WeChat posts are available from [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/chinese/?s=%E5%94%90%E6%98%A0%E7%BA%A2 CDT] and [http://chuansong.me/account/psyeyes chuansong.me].
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Archives of Tang's public WeChat posts are available from [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/chinese/?s=%E5%94%90%E6%98%A0%E7%BA%A2 CDT Chinese] and [http://chuansong.me/account/psyeyes chuansong.me].
  
===Tang Yinghong on CDT===
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== Related CDS Entries ==
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{{ #dpl: linksto = {{FULLPAGENAME}} }}
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* '''[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/china/tang-yinghong More]'''
 
  
===China Digital Space Related Links===
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== CDT Coverage ==
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*[https://chinadigitaltimes.net/?s=tang%20yinghong English]
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*[https://chinadigitaltimes.net/chinese/tag/唐映红/ 中文]
  
[[Category:People]][[Category:Tang Yinghong]][[Category:唐映红]]
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[[Category:People]]

2020年12月22日 (二) 21:32的版本

Táng Yìnghóng 唐映红

Tang Yinghong (Weibo)

Columnist and pop-psychologist Tang Yinghong employs his wide-ranging knowledge—and his public WeChat account—to analyze a host of social phenomenon in China: the mass appeal of the pollution documentary "Under the Dome," public "indifference over the switch to a Two-Child Policy," and foreign fast food companies' many scandals in China, to name a few. He is a prolific critic of China's social and political situation.

Tang is a native of Leshan, Sichuan Province, a prefecture-level city and home to the largest Buddha in the world. He studied engineering at Chongqing University, then went on to earn his master's degree in psychology from Beijing Normal University. He has worked at the National Institute of Education Sciences and in the private sector. The author of several educational texts, Tang is currently on faculty in the School of Education Sciences at Leshan Normal University, as well as a columnist for Tencent's online magazine Dajia.

A prolific producer of "self-media" (zì méitǐ 自媒体), Tang brings the perspectives of psychology and history to current affairs. He explains the virality of Chai Jing's exposé on air pollution "Under the Dome" as an instance of the "liberating effect of conformity" (also known as behavioral contagion). The patriotic girl band 56 Flowers, Tang writes, exemplifies the power of positive association and the totemization of "innocent young girls," a practice familiar from the former Soviet Union and Nazi Germany. He calls out the Chinese government's hypocrisy in combating smog by quoting reports on capitalist-fueled pollution from People's Daily in 1971. "We will only be able to ameliorate smog by reining in greed," Tang warns.

Archives of Tang's public WeChat posts are available from CDT Chinese and chuansong.me.

Related CDS Entries

CDT Coverage