Gateway to Global China (开门见山)

Gateway to Global China
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Gateway to Global China (开门见山)
Language
🇺🇲
Publishing Since
6/25/2025
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Recent Episodes

May 26, 2026
Dancing in China’s Digital Space
<p>For years, Anglophone coverage of the Chinese internet has emphasised the Great Firewall. The focus on censorship and surveillance collapses information production and access into a false binary between the haves and have-nots, the free and unfree. Yet, the authoritarian state cannot extinguish the Chinese people’s creativity and entrepreneurship, and the wall itself can unfold into a dynamic space of contention and self-expression.</p><p>How have the Chinese people been innovating against political and material constraints? How is technological progress pursued and perceived both inside and outside of China? What kind of future or alternative past do people in China imagine for themselves and the rest of humanity? For this episode, Yangyang spoke with journalist and author <strong>Yi-Ling Liu</strong> and writer <strong>Afra Wang</strong> on the creative souls who dance along the edge of possibility in China, and the lure and limitations of techno-modernity.</p>

April 28, 2026
The Poetic Justice of Queer China
<p>From royal court legends to a 17th-centurydeity, gay people have been part of Chinese life and literature for millennia. Since the 1990s, legal reforms in China and the country’s integration into global capitalism have fostered new avenues for civic action. Queer Chinese activists fought for their rights in the courts, through legislative channels,and by garnering public support. Despite government crackdowns in recent years, the work continues outside the limelight, while art and literature remain a fertileground for queer expression and resistance. </p><p> How does the ancient history of queer China inspire life today? What have decades of gay activism accomplished, and what are the limitations? How should one interpret the relations between queer rights and state power, especially in an authoritarian society? For this episode, Yangyang spoke with media studies professor Hongwei Bao and legalscholar Darius Longarino on queer literature and activism in China, and why poetry can reign when court fails. </p><p></p>

March 25, 2026
Being Muslim in China
<p>This month, China’s National People’s Congress held its annual meeting and passed a new law on ‘promoting ethnic unity and progress’. The legislation further codifies the suppression of non-Han languages and customs in China in the name of national cohesion and civilisational uplift.</p><p>For years, the Party-State has dictated the correct way to be Chinese and subjected the Uyghurs and other Muslim populations in Xinjiang to mass internment, high-tech surveillance, and forced assimilation. Yet, for centuries, Muslims have been an integral part of the country we call China today. Islamic and Confucian cultures learned from and enriched each other. What does it mean to be Muslim in China, historically and in the present? What has led to the current repression in Xinjiang, and how might one survive and struggle against state violence and authoritarian control in the year 2026?</p><p>For this episode, Yangyang spoke with historian <strong>Rian Thum</strong> and anthropologist <strong>Darren Byler</strong> on the past and present of the Uyghur homeland, and how identities can survive in community and through the written word.</p>
9 total episodes available
Recent guests on Gateway to Global China
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Jing Wang
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Christian Sorace
Guest
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Frequently asked questions
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- What is Gateway to Global China?
- How often does this podcast release new episodes?
This podcast updates daily.
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This podcast is available on 4 platforms including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and more. You can also use the RSS feed directly.
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Yes, this podcast regularly features guests.
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