Selling China by the Sleeve Dance
How a touring dance company battles the Chinese Communist Party.
How a touring dance company battles the Chinese Communist Party.
Nicholas Hune-Brown Hazlitt Oct 2017 25min Permalink
“The cowboy hats, target practice, and barbecue brisket were just a bonus. They were really there for the deregulated electrical grid.”
Meaghan Tobin Rest of World Aug 2021 10min Permalink
In Taipei, young people like Nancy Tao Chen Ying watched as the Hong Kong protests were brutally extinguished. Now they wonder what’s in their future.
Sarah A. Topol New York Times Magazine Aug 2021 50min Permalink
China is neither a Marxist fundamentalist regime nor a universally-surveilled open-air prison, in which one is free to do nothing but worship the party and carry out its edicts. That is however the impression created by quite a bit of the media. I think that’s not the fault of individual journalists, instead more structural explanations are at work. News bureaus are highly concentrated in Beijing, due in part to natural corporate consolidation, but mostly because the government maintains a strict cap on foreign journalist visas. As a result, the bulk of journalists are based in the part of China that has the most politics and the least sense of growth. Everything here is doom and gloom, a fact well conveyed to the outside world.
A tale of cannabis boom and bust.
Jessica Lussenhop, Zhaoyin Feng BBC News May 2021 30min Permalink
Growth has slowed to a trickle in parts of Manchuria—but some young people are finding new careers online.
Tom Hancock Financial Times Apr 2019 15min Permalink
As mass detentions and surveillance dominate the lives of China’s Uyghurs and Kazakhs, a woman struggles to free herself.
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Apr 2021 1h10min Permalink
An investigation into the killing of Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia.
Engen Tham, Jacob Borg, Christoph Giesen, Stephen Grey Reuters Mar 2021 30min Permalink
When a Chinese billionaire bought one of Britain’s most prestigious golf clubs in 2015, dentists and estate agents were confronted with the unsentimental force of globalized capital.
Samanth Subramanian Guardian Mar 2021 Permalink
We stopped at a service station where there were old truck drivers, their vehicles festooned with red banners: “All-out war against the virus, weather hard times together.” The drivers wore their masks down around their chins as they smoked. I asked for water at the only open shop, and the assistant pulled his jacket up to cover his mouth before saying “over there.”
Lavender Au New York Review of Books Mar 2020 15min Permalink
The inside story of the megadonor and the Chinese casino money flooding our elections.
Matt Isaacs Mother Jones Feb 2016 25min Permalink
China is forcing hundreds of thousands of Uighurs and other minorities into hard, manual labour in the vast cotton fields of its western region of Xinjiang.
John Sudworth BBC Dec 2020 25min Permalink
A year ago, he was one of the Premier League’s highest-paid players. Now, after angering China and refusing a pay cut, he has simply vanished.
Rory Smith, Tariq Panja New York Times Oct 2020 Permalink
Nine days in Wuhan.
Peter Hessler New Yorker Oct 2020 30min Permalink
Immigrant struggles in America forged a bond that became even tighter after my mother’s A.L.S. diagnosis. Then, as COVID-19 threatened, Chinese nationalists began calling us traitors to our country.
Jiayang Fan New Yorker Sep 2020 35min Permalink
A double life across two cultures.
Diana Xin Electric Lit Aug 2020 30min Permalink
Xi Jinping is using artificial intelligence to enhance his government’s totalitarian control—and he’s exporting this technology to regimes around the globe.
Ross Andersen The Atlantic Jul 2020 30min Permalink
Earlier this month, while China's leaders were staging a grandiose celebration of their revolution's 40th birthday, thousands of somber Hong Kong residents gathered for a dreary commemoration of their own. Far from the fireworks display in Beijing, Hong Kongers huddled in a rainstorm near the bronze statue of Queen Victoria, singing patriotic songs and listening to mournful poems dedicated to those who died in Tiananmen Square.
Margaret Scott The New York Times Oct 1989 20min Permalink
A conversation with the former player, and new coach, about basketball, Beijing, and being understood.
Vinson Cunningham The New Yorker Apr 2020 20min Permalink
Wuhan-based virologist Shi Zhengli has identified dozens of deadly SARS-like viruses in bat caves, and she warns there are more out there
Jane Qiu Scientific American Apr 2020 30min Permalink
The first epicenter is coming back to life, but not as anyone knew it.
The weakest link in America’s national security may not be foreign technology but its own people. The story of the single mother who sold out to China.
Mara Hvistendahl 1843 Apr 2020 20min Permalink
Forty-five days of avoiding the coronavirus.
Peter Hessler New Yorker Mar 2020 30min Permalink
How a dating app helped a generation of Chinese come out of the closet.
Yi-Ling Liu New York Times Magazine Mar 2020 30min Permalink
When Zulhumar Isaac’s parents disappeared amid a wave of detentions of ethnic minorities, she had to play a perilous game with the state to get them back.
Sarah A. Topol New York Times Magazine Jan 2020 50min Permalink