In 1915, in Shanghai, Chen Duxiu founded a magazine called qingnian zazhi (青年杂志), or Youth Magazine. Soon after, it was renamed xinqingnian (新青年): New Youth. Perhaps Chen came to feel that the youth of the times had something new to offer China, or that his writers had something new to offer China’s youth. Either way, the magazine and the name captured the spirit of the New Culture Movement which led to May 4th. New Youth aimed to call China out of its Confucian slumber with plain, angry writing by the likes of Lu Xun and essays promoting democracy. Later, it more heavily promoted Marxism and eventually provided an intellectual base for the Communist Party which Chen co-founded in 1921. The name was iconic for a China fresh out of imperial ...
In February 2014, the US-based Tea Leaf Nation, a news site dedicated to Chinese citizens and social...
Continuous attempts are made by the Chinese government to ‘protect’ the minds of the young people of...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
In 1915, in Shanghai, Chen Duxiu founded a magazine called qingnian zazhi (青年杂志), or Youth Magazine....
Two things that China Beat has been tracking since we began are Chinese nationalism and youth attitu...
Youth Cultures in China opens with Wen Yiduo’s assumption of revolutionary zeal among Chinese youth ...
In our ongoing effort to draw attention from time to time to blogs about China we come across and li...
In late May and early June, I interviewed professors Zhang Weiying and Pan Wei of Peking University ...
Whenever I take a trip that includes stops in Shanghai and Beijing, two people I make sure to meet u...
After a few weeks of vacation, China Beat is back to posting (though we considered making an 8 perce...
As we prepare to mark the 30th anniversary of one turning point in the history of Chinese dissent (t...
Different countries and fields of study differ in determining the age group of youth. Based on the c...
With much gratitude, the China Beat editors say goodbye. What a difference four years can make—for a...
Whenever “1989” is mentioned, people in the West instantly think about the protesting students in Ti...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
In February 2014, the US-based Tea Leaf Nation, a news site dedicated to Chinese citizens and social...
Continuous attempts are made by the Chinese government to ‘protect’ the minds of the young people of...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
In 1915, in Shanghai, Chen Duxiu founded a magazine called qingnian zazhi (青年杂志), or Youth Magazine....
Two things that China Beat has been tracking since we began are Chinese nationalism and youth attitu...
Youth Cultures in China opens with Wen Yiduo’s assumption of revolutionary zeal among Chinese youth ...
In our ongoing effort to draw attention from time to time to blogs about China we come across and li...
In late May and early June, I interviewed professors Zhang Weiying and Pan Wei of Peking University ...
Whenever I take a trip that includes stops in Shanghai and Beijing, two people I make sure to meet u...
After a few weeks of vacation, China Beat is back to posting (though we considered making an 8 perce...
As we prepare to mark the 30th anniversary of one turning point in the history of Chinese dissent (t...
Different countries and fields of study differ in determining the age group of youth. Based on the c...
With much gratitude, the China Beat editors say goodbye. What a difference four years can make—for a...
Whenever “1989” is mentioned, people in the West instantly think about the protesting students in Ti...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
In February 2014, the US-based Tea Leaf Nation, a news site dedicated to Chinese citizens and social...
Continuous attempts are made by the Chinese government to ‘protect’ the minds of the young people of...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...