China Paw-litics, anyone? (2)

Dear all, thanks for interesting comments earlier on dogs and pets in China. I sympathize with Claire Huot’s comments as well. But I still think dogs raised for food can be perfectly OK. I’ve been invited, in China, to share dogs that were raised locally and respectfully, and then eaten, and I can’t see why one should not eat them, any less than any other human-raised animal, whether duck or pig or cattle or chicken (if one is to eat any of them at all … and, needless to say, without abusing any of them).

I have contributed a chapter on human-animal relations in China, to a book on China and its neighbors, _The Art of Neighbouring_, which is now already listed — though it may be a few weeks before it can be bought). My chapter is mostly about neighborly relations to wild animals, in contrast to domestic and pet animals in human charge/care:

Fiskesjö, Magnus. “China’s Animal Neighbours.” In Martin Saxer and Zhang Juan, eds. The Art of Neighbouring: Making Relations Across China’s Borders. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press (2016). ISBN: 9789462982581.

http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/A/bo25088801.html

http://en.aup.nl/books/9789462982581-the-art-of-neighbouring.html

–Sincerely

Magnus Fiskesjö <nf42@cornell.edu>

Wukan crushed

Source: BBC News (9/13/16)
China’s protest village of Wukan crushed
By Stephen McDonell, BBC News, on the outskirts of Wukan

Villager Wei Yonghan makes a speech before assembled Wukan villagers, who are demanding justice for a series of land grabs and for the release of their elected village chief Lin Zuluan, who was arrested by authorities, in the southern province of Guangdong, China June 20, 2016.

REUTERS: Image caption; Villagers in Wukan have been protesting for months

They came at three o’clock in the morning and started smashing in doors to arrest those seen as leaders but it was never going to be straightforward for the Chinese authorities to retake Wukan.

The footage sent out to media outlets, including the BBC, appears to show a street battle that came with the breaking of dawn. Continue reading Wukan crushed

Venture communism

Source: NYT (9/3/16)
Venture Communism: How China Is Building a Start-Up Boom
点击查看本文中文版 Read in Chinese
By MICHAEL SCHUMAN

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Employees at Chemayi, a car repair services company with an office in Dream Town, a start-up incubator in Hangzhou, China. Credit: Jes Aznar for The New York Times

HANGZHOU, China — In Dream Town, a collection of boxy office buildings on the gritty edge of this historic city, one tiny company is developing a portable 3-D printer. Another takes orders for traditional Chinese massages by smartphone. They are just two of the 710 start-ups being nurtured here.

Anywhere else, an incubator like Dream Town would be a vision of venture capitalists, angel investors or technology stalwarts. But this is China. The Chinese Communist Party doesn’t trust the invisible hand of capitalism alone to encourage entrepreneurship, especially since it is a big part of the leadership’s strategy to reshape the sagging economy. Continue reading Venture communism

Turn to Buddhism

Source: NYT (9/7/16)
China’s Tech-Savvy, Burned-Out and Spiritually Adrift, Turn to Buddhism
By JAVIER C. HERNÁNDEZ

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A view of Longquan Monastery, in the hinterlands of Beijing. In success-driven China, many people marvel at the decision of the temple’s monks to leave behind lucrative careers in the tech sector to devote themselves to Buddhist study. Credit: Giulia Marchi for NYT

BEIJING — For centuries, Buddhists seeking enlightenment made the journey to Longquan Monastery, a lonesome temple on a hilltop in the hinterlands of northwest Beijing. Under the ginkgo and cypress trees, they meditated, chanted and pored over ancient texts.

Now a new generation has arrived. They wear hoodies, watch television shows like “The Big Bang Theory” and use chat apps to trade mantras. Many, with jobs at some of China’s hottest and most demanding companies, feel burned-out and spiritually adrift, and are looking for change. Continue reading Turn to Buddhism

Shariah with Chinese characteristics

Source: NYT (9/6/16)
Shariah With Chinese Characteristics: A Scholar Looks at the Muslim Hui
By IAN JOHNSON

Matthew S. Erie, a trained lawyer and ethnographer who teaches at Oxford University, lived for two years in Linxia, a small city in the northwestern Chinese province of Gansu. Known as China’s Mecca, it is a center of religious life for the Hui, an ethnic minority numbering 10 million who practice Islam. Along with the Turkic Uighurs, they are one of 10 officially recognized ethnic groups that practice Islam, making the total population of Muslims in China around 23 million, according to the 2010 government census. Continue reading Shariah with Chinese characteristics

BIBF and future publishing trends

Source: Global Times (8/25/16)
Beijing International Book Fair trends show future direction of Chinese publishing
By Zhang Yuchen

A woman poses for a photo at the Beijing International Book Fair on Wednesday. Photo: Zhang Yuchen/GT

As Chinese writers continue to capture the attention of readers around the world, Beijing’s annual book fair is working to facilitate more transnational cooperation and exchanges.

The 23th Beijing International Book Fair (BIBF) kicked off on Wednesday together with the 14th Beijing International Book Festival at the China International Exhibition Center in Beijing. Continue reading BIBF and future publishing trends

Women head overseas to freeze their eggs

Source: Sinosphere, NYT (8/30/16)
Chinese Women Head Overseas to Freeze Their Eggs
By CAROLYN ZHANG

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A women’s egg being prepared for in vitro fertilization in Beijing. Because unmarried women are barred from assisted reproductive procedures in China, more are going to the United States and other countries to have their eggs frozen. Credit: Andy Wong/Associated Press

BEIJING — The anesthesia was administered, and Lu Yi gradually lost consciousness. Over the next 30 minutes, a doctor retrieved eight eggs from her body. They were transferred to a liquid nitrogen storage chamber, where the fragile bubbles of human potential entered a frozen future full of hope and uncertainty. Continue reading Women head overseas to freeze their eggs

New face of Chinese nationalism

Source: Tea Leaf Nation, Foreign Policy (8/25/16)
The New Face of Chinese Nationalism
‘Little pink’ web users are jumping onto Twitter and Instagram to call out enemies of the state.

The New Face of Chinese Nationalism

The just-completed 2016 Rio Olympics didn’t just mark the ascendance of major Chinese athletes like swimmer and internet darling Fu Yuanhui — it also showed, in real time, how Chinese nationalism can affect the global online dialogue. During the games, Australian gold medalist swimmer Mack Horton called Chinese competitor Sun Yang a “drug cheat”; in response, Chinese netizens flooded Horton’s accounts on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram — all of which are blocked in China and can only be accessed with censorship circumvention tools — to demand an apology. (Chinese fans were in such a rush to bombard Horton’s social media presence that some of them even misspelled his name and ended up attacking Mark Horton, an English IT worker, instead.) Continue reading New face of Chinese nationalism

How filmmaker came across new kind of Tibetan business

Source: Sinosphere, NYT (8/24/16)
How a Hong Kong Filmmaker Came Across a New Kind of Tibetan Business
点击查看本文中文版 Read in Chinese
By EDWARD WONG

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A worker inspecting a yak wool scarf at the Norlha textiles workshop in Gansu Province. Credit: Gilles Sabrie for The New York Times

BEIJING — Several years ago, Ruby Yang, an Academy Award-winning documentary filmmaker based in Hong Kong, began working with Siemens, the German engineering company, on a corporate video about sustainable development.

She and the company’s representatives decided to try to find a social enterprise in China’s far west, which encompasses the vast Tibetan plateau. Ms. Yang said the company allowed her creative control, with the only major requirement being that the film illustrate how electricity was helping the region, where Siemens had been working with electricity companies. Continue reading How filmmaker came across new kind of Tibetan business

TV show spotlights middle class anxieties

Source: China Real Time, WSJ (8/25/16)
TV Show Spotlights Middle Class Anxieties in China
By Liyan Qi

Last year, more than 520,000 people left China to study abroad. A new Chinese TV show might give you some insight into why Chinese parents want to send their kids overseas. Photo: Linmon Pictures

A hit Chinese TV drama that tells the story of three families who sent their young teens to study abroad has surfaced middle-class doubts about their future in the country.

“A Love for Separation,” based on a novel by Lu Yingong, started screening last week and grabbed the public’s attention despite competing with the Olympic games for viewers. Users on the cultural website douban.com gave the show an average score of 8.2 out of 10. Continue reading TV show spotlights middle class anxieties

Happy birthday, Uncle Toad

Source: SCMP (8/17/16)
‘Happy birthday, Uncle Toad’ — fanbase shows its love for Jiang Zemin
Pop art tributes appear on Chinese social media congratulating the former leader as he turns 90, but messages seem to carry jab at the current, more formal president
By Jun Mai

Some of the online tributes to former leader Jiang Zemin on his birthday. Graphic: SCMP

He may have been ridiculed while in power but former Chinese president Jiang Zemin has inspired a wave of nostalgic political pop art on his 90th birthday, with many seeing the outpouring as an indirect jab at present policies.

“Happy birthday, Uncle Toad! One more second!” a WeChat user wrote on Wednesday under a cartoon of a rectangular pair of glasses in the shape of a “90”. Continue reading Happy birthday, Uncle Toad

No Chinese among openly gay athletes

Source: Sinosphere, NYT (8/12/16)
More Openly Gay Olympians Than Ever, but No Chinese Among Them
By DIDI KIRSTEN TATLOW

Brittney Griner of the United States women’s basketball team, one of the openly gay athletes competing in the 2016 Olympics, during a game against Spain on Monday. CreditChristian Petersen/Getty Images

BEIJING — Peng Yanhui is celebrating the fact that a record number of openly gay athletes are taking part in the Olympics, while ruing that none are from China.

Fifty-two competitors and coaches who are openly lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or intersex are participating in the Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro, according to figures from Outsports, a website for gay and lesbian sports news. Continue reading No Chinese among openly gay athletes

Reconstructing Taoism’s transformations (1)

It is worth noting that in subsequent dynasties, revolts had been based on the Taoist idea of equality and had strong religious flavour. This is true especially with uprisings led by religious women such as the White Lotus Sect. In the Ming dynasty, a woman named Tang Sai’er of the White Lotus Society led an army strong enough to threaten the capital Beijing. (See Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women: Tang through Ming, Sharpe, 2014.)

Professor Kleeman says,”The only “Buddhists” were Buddhist monks and the only “Taoists” were Taoist priests. “ Is he including Buddhists nuns in “Buddhist monks”? And including Taoist priestesses in ‘”Taoist priests”? If not, he is ignoring a sizeable number of Buddhists and Taoists in  China.

Lily Lee <l.lee@sydney.edu.au>

Mistress dispellers

Source: Sinosphere, NYT (7/29/16)
China’s Cheating Husbands Fuel an Industry of ‘Mistress Dispellers’
By EMILY FENG and CHARLOTTE YANG

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A poster for “Mistress Dispeller,” a Chinese film about a man whose job is to lure women from their married lovers and whose wife fears he’s falling for the mistress he was hired to dispel. Credit Li Chenyu

BEIJING — When Ms. Wang, a 39-year-old from Shanghai, discovered texts on her husband’s phone that suggested he was having an affair with one of his employees, she was distraught. “I couldn’t sleep at night and couldn’t stop crying,” she said. “I was very hurt.”

She decided to take action, though perhaps not in the expected way. Rather than confronting her husband, she searched online for a “mistress dispeller.’’

Mistress-dispelling services, increasingly common in China’s larger cities, specialize in ending affairs between married men and their extramarital lovers. Continue reading Mistress dispellers

Unearthing China’s past

Source: NYT (7/21/16)
Unearthing China’s Past at a Market Whose Raffish Air Is a Selling Point
By Jane Perlez

A dealer of Mao-era propaganda and antiques in his shop on the second floor of the Exhibition Hall at Panjiayuan, Beijing’s biggest antique and flea market. CreditGilles Sabrie for The New York Times

BEIJING — The vast antiques market is awash in jewelry, snuff bottles, old clocks, brass paperweights, ceramics, and slabs of jade of many hues and dubious quality. It has the same feel as flea markets all around the world that advertise antiquities but do not always deliver the real thing.

Yet when strolling through the Panjiayuan market, a huge open-air space in southeast Beijing, the question of whether the wares are authentic is beside the point. At its heart, the market is a raucous hub for unearthing the past 100 years or more of China’s turbulent past. Continue reading Unearthing China’s past