Well lets get these fascinating Chinese links (see above, hehe) out there:
Evan Osnos writes a fabulous article in the New Yorker on Chinese tour groups out exploring. He joins Chinese tour group to Europe, and is a much braver man than I.
Bob Dylan goes to Beijing and plays some music. Some people fret others are circumspect.
A revolutionary (for China) Chinese University in Shenzhen China opens. It is revolutionary because it does not accept the Gaokao or entrance exam, and it is backed in its efforts to foster independent thought and research by the local government of Shenzhen. It will not be accredited by the National Education Ministry, but it is trying to carve a new path for Chinese education. I remember reading an interview with Mr. Zhu in Science which I discussed with my Chinese grad student class back in Kaifeng many years ago. They were less excited. Perhaps because they had already invested a lot of time in their traditional Chinese educations of suspect value. hmm
Chinese Ministry of Culture bans time travel!...
...on TV.
Ok less amusing but still pretty weird. The censors in China don't just go after things overtly political or that which might cause social upheaval. They also are pretty puritanical on pornography and I guess time travel too. Perhaps they really are worried about differing historical narratives being put out there.
Superstition again mixes with science and propaganda in contemporary China.
Showing posts with label Evan Osnos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evan Osnos. Show all posts
Monday, April 11, 2011
China Links
Labels:
Chinese culture,
education,
Evan Osnos,
links,
music,
travel
Thursday, April 7, 2011
"Please, anyone who knows the whereabouts of the above, contact the family"
Ai Weiwei, male, 53 years old. On April 3, 2011 around 8:30, at Beijing Capital International Airport, before boarding a flight to Hong Kong, he was taken away by three men. More than fifty hours later, present whereabouts remains unknown.This was a missing person sign written and signed by Weiwei's family (I copied the photo and translation from Evan Osnos' great New Yorker blog Letter from China.)
Please, anyone who knows the whereabouts of the above, contact the family
Labels:
Ai Weiwei,
blogs,
Evan Osnos,
Global Times,
James Fallows
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