One of the topics we raised in China in 2008 was the changing relationship between the Chinese leadership and regular people over the past years. Last weekChina Digital Times pointed to another example of this changing relationship–Wen Jiabao answering netizens’ questions online. We’ve run a few related pieces at the site before, such as Nicolai Volland’s “Boss Hu and the Press” and Richard Kraus’s “Preserving the Premier’s Calligraphy at Beichuan Middle School.
One week ago, China Beat founders Jeff Wasserstrom and Ken Pomeranz participated in a conference at ...
“A Peking University student takes notes at a lecture titled ‘the Tibet question’ (you can just make...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
One of the topics we raised in China in 2008 was the changing relationship between the Chinese leade...
This post follows up on previous ones, such as those found here and here, that have focused on the w...
China has been looming ever larger in the global economy and the global imagination in recent years,...
We were amused to see that the most recent Sinica podcast was ominously titled “Death of the China B...
Those who follow China Beat on Twitter might have noticed that our long-neglected feed has shown sig...
Since mid-2009, China has become much more assertive in world affairs, taking positions that challen...
Little bits and pieces from around the web… 1. In case you missed it, David Brooks wrote a column ab...
This essay is based on the script of a talk Ying Zhu gave at Google’s New York offices on February 1...
1. We’ve discussed Lu Xun quite a lot lately, and more great Lu Xun-related stories keep coming our ...
As part of our continuing follow-up on “China Beatniks in Beijing,” we wanted to share with you a co...
Hu Jintao participated in an online discussion today (his first) with Chinese netizens where he answ...
We wanted to draw reader attention to a few interviews that aired this week from regular China Beat ...
One week ago, China Beat founders Jeff Wasserstrom and Ken Pomeranz participated in a conference at ...
“A Peking University student takes notes at a lecture titled ‘the Tibet question’ (you can just make...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
One of the topics we raised in China in 2008 was the changing relationship between the Chinese leade...
This post follows up on previous ones, such as those found here and here, that have focused on the w...
China has been looming ever larger in the global economy and the global imagination in recent years,...
We were amused to see that the most recent Sinica podcast was ominously titled “Death of the China B...
Those who follow China Beat on Twitter might have noticed that our long-neglected feed has shown sig...
Since mid-2009, China has become much more assertive in world affairs, taking positions that challen...
Little bits and pieces from around the web… 1. In case you missed it, David Brooks wrote a column ab...
This essay is based on the script of a talk Ying Zhu gave at Google’s New York offices on February 1...
1. We’ve discussed Lu Xun quite a lot lately, and more great Lu Xun-related stories keep coming our ...
As part of our continuing follow-up on “China Beatniks in Beijing,” we wanted to share with you a co...
Hu Jintao participated in an online discussion today (his first) with Chinese netizens where he answ...
We wanted to draw reader attention to a few interviews that aired this week from regular China Beat ...
One week ago, China Beat founders Jeff Wasserstrom and Ken Pomeranz participated in a conference at ...
“A Peking University student takes notes at a lecture titled ‘the Tibet question’ (you can just make...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...