Another Guest post by Yajun: Han Han and the tragedy of the Chinese Educational System

The New York Times published an article about Han Han last week. In the article, Graham Lee, a Hong Kong native studying in Peking University was quoted saying “His way of thinking is different from that of ordinary Chinese.”

At first glance, this sentence sounds offensive. How do ordinary Chinese think? However, thinking for a second, I am not surprised that he felt this way.

In any other country, I don’t think Han Han would be that special. His criticisms and the courage to challenge authority, even the having the balls  to drop out of high school, are common characteristics of young people around the world. He is a very good writer, that’s for sure, but in most places his writing wouldn’t be enough to make him one of the most popular bloggers and an iconic figure. However, in China, what Han Han says and does has value.

When I was in college, I was a fan of Han Han. His books opened my eyes and mind. For the first time in my life, I realized students could criticize and analyze profoundly the problems of the China’s education system. His words were harsh, but they were just so true.

Throughout

Aftershock and the legacy of the 1976 Tangshan Earthquake

Feng Xiaogang’s new movie 唐山大地震 (Aftershock) is setting all-kinds of domestic box office records this week.  I haven’t seen it yet, but good friend and fellow China blogger Modern Lei Feng has reviewed the movie.  He said:

When I first heard about the movie, I thought this was Feng’s way of capitalizing off the Sichuan earthquake.  Going into the movie, I had low expectations, and when it started and the credits included a minute of producers and executive producers,  I sat back and prepared for a movie along the lines of “Founding of the Republic”, where everyone in the Chinese movie industry was falling over themselves to play a role in the CCP’s love letter in film to itself.  If not that, it would be an overly contrived attempt to cram history into a movie lacking a story like Summer Palace.  Spoiler alerts below (not that there’s a lot that can be spoiled), so if you want it all to be fresh, wait until you’ve watched the movie before reading on.

This is not like either of those, it is definitely a movie with a story to tell and while the earthquake’s “aftershocks” loom large throughout the movie, the actual

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