Chinese, following Chairman Mao’s famous phrase, tend to use the expression “like a fire burning in the wilderness” [燎原之火 liaoyuan zhi huo] to describe the unexpected rise and popularity of something marginalized or rebellious. Since the literary explosion in the years immediately after Mao’s death, mainland Chinese literary circles have rarely witnessed such a “wild fire.” Recently, however, a fierce literary “fire” suddenly broke out and shocked the entire Chinese intellectual world. The spark that ignited this fire is Chan Koon-chung’s 陈冠中 political novel Shengshi: Zhongguo 2013 [盛世:中国 2013]. [1
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
Political, economic and intellectual elites in China have for some time been in the grip of ‘futurol...
The Three Gorges Dam is the largest hydro-electric power station in the world. The construction of t...
Chinese, following Chairman Mao’s famous phrase, tend to use the expression “like a fire burning in ...
When Yan Lianke published his novel The Joy of Living (Shou huo) in 2004, in which a gang of disable...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
At the end of the Cold War, scholars were pondering how far Western ideas would spread in an interna...
Recent years have seen an increase in the number of dystopian novels appearing in post-Tiananmen Squ...
The discourse of “youth” figured prominently in Chinese literature since Liang Qichao published his ...
The ascent to power by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1949 was a period of great turmoil and c...
The recent explosion of popular protest in China, often framed as a demand for the fulfillment of “r...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
The closer we draw to the Mao regime, the clearer it becomes that Mao is the defining figure of Chin...
Chinese literature and its significance or insignificance is a continued subject of heated debate in...
China Beat is a global operation (with posts being written thus far everywhere from Beijing to Bosto...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
Political, economic and intellectual elites in China have for some time been in the grip of ‘futurol...
The Three Gorges Dam is the largest hydro-electric power station in the world. The construction of t...
Chinese, following Chairman Mao’s famous phrase, tend to use the expression “like a fire burning in ...
When Yan Lianke published his novel The Joy of Living (Shou huo) in 2004, in which a gang of disable...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
At the end of the Cold War, scholars were pondering how far Western ideas would spread in an interna...
Recent years have seen an increase in the number of dystopian novels appearing in post-Tiananmen Squ...
The discourse of “youth” figured prominently in Chinese literature since Liang Qichao published his ...
The ascent to power by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1949 was a period of great turmoil and c...
The recent explosion of popular protest in China, often framed as a demand for the fulfillment of “r...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
The closer we draw to the Mao regime, the clearer it becomes that Mao is the defining figure of Chin...
Chinese literature and its significance or insignificance is a continued subject of heated debate in...
China Beat is a global operation (with posts being written thus far everywhere from Beijing to Bosto...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
Political, economic and intellectual elites in China have for some time been in the grip of ‘futurol...
The Three Gorges Dam is the largest hydro-electric power station in the world. The construction of t...