How the Apple Confrontation Divides China
Not everyone in China is proud of the way their government handled a recent fight with the tech giant. More »
Not everyone in China is proud of the way their government handled a recent fight with the tech giant. More »
What effect will the Southern Weekend incident have on the future of Chinese media? More »
Chinese web users seem to lean toward Obama, but mostly seem love the populism of American politics, a sharp contrast to their own system as well as a reminder of how much the two societies have in common. More »
The same patriotic feelings that send Chinese to rally for national sovereignty over disputed islands might also explain their surprising and apparently conflicting answers to an online discussion. More »
A less insular and more worldly China may be turning away from the sport of Mao Zedong's ping pong diplomacy, once a source of tremendous national pride and obsession. More »
China wants inventors and entrepreneurs, but its schools, built around the notorious gaokao exam, are still designed to produce cookie-cutter engineers and accountants More »
Ever-controversial Global Times published a surprisingly frank editorial that hit on a long-running Chinese debate over reform, governance, and democracy. More »
Mayor Wang Zhongbing got a little carried away when his town was awarded a contract to produce steel and iron. More »
Half a century after the famine that killed perhaps 30 million people, censors have quietly loosened their ban and citizens are moving past the taboo. Why now? More »
A new U.S. policy that restricts Confucius Institutes starts a debate about China's influence abroad. More »
When officials spent billions of yuan to blanket Qingdao with pricey foliage, citizens fought back online. More »
Web users fume over Chinese fishermen held hostage by North Koreans, another turn in a complex relationship going back to the Korean War. More »
The Chinese national identity has long been tied up with its language, for natives and foreigners alike. More »
Chen Guangcheng's decision to take shelter in the U.S. embassy extends a modern tradition in China of seeing America as an idealized alternative to their own system. More »
China's ultra-popular, Twitter-like service moves too fast for censors or propagandists to keep up, but it's changing more than just the spread of information. More »
As Chinese students flood private American high schools, aided by high-priced "consultants," they are changing concepts of success and security back home, and leading ambitious schools to seek out more of the eager (and often full-paying) mainlanders. More »
Long before the NBA arrived, missionaries, revolutionaries, and communists helped make the game ubiquitous here. More »
Alienated and struggling to get by in China's big cities, migrant workers brave chaotic lines and difficult journeys for a chance to reconnect with what they left back home. More »
Christianity's most important holiday is a big event here, but state regulation of religion and a suspicion of all things Western can sometimes get in the way. And, yes, it's too commercialized. More »
The way Americans talk about China can often seem hostile, frustrating, or altogether irreconcilable with the world as a newcomer from China knows it More »
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