Monthly Archive for March, 2007

Carrefour

The French owned supermarket chain Carrefour has a big presence in China with stores in all the major cities. On visits to branches in Qingdao and Beijing I was surprised at the variety of living and dead animals (part & whole!) available… half a ducks head or chickens neck anyone? Yum…!

DSC_3639

DSC_3465

DSC_3466
Squashed dead piglet for dinner?

DSC_3461
You can’t keep these things as pets in the UK, let alone eat them!!

Check here for some more culinary delights (will update with more as I go!).

Enjoyed this post? Please subscribe to my RSS feed to stay up to date.

Bad Manners

A few articles caught my eye in Beijing recently, thought they were worth sharing for their comedic value :D

War on Chinglish

Beijing has vowed to clean up all awkward English translations in public places in an eight-month campaign launched last week.

The government will no longer tolerate notoriously bad translations such as “deformed” instead of “disabled”. The campaign will require all translations to be correct in terms of grammar and choice of words.

So far, Beijing has replaced 6,300 road signs that were poorly written, and is busy recruiting volunteers to hunt errors in public places. People can log on to www.bjenglish.net.cn to report their discoveries.

Information Times

DSC_3250
Just one of the many mistranslated/funny signs you’ll find in China - more here & here!

Spit it out

There will soon be a 50-yuan (£3.34) fine for people who spit and litter in the streets of Beijing, an official said last Wednesday.

After deciding that the 11th day of each month was Queuing Day, during which people should queue in an orderly manner, Beijing has now adopted a different approach to help people quit bad manners as the 2008 Olympic Games approaches.

The officials said 50 yuan could buy 16 subway tickets in Beijing, so it would be an effective reminder for people who spit and litter.

www.chinanews.com.cn

On a slightly more sober note here’s something you probably wont be reading about here:

The longest recorded piece of graffiti was painted by a student in the toilets of his college at Changsha, China in 1915. It consisted of over 4000 characters criticising his teachers and the state of Chinese society.

After completing this masterpiece the student handed himself in and was paraded in front of the school and threatened with expulsion. The student was a 22 year old Chairman Mao. A graffiti artist who later founded the People’s Republic of China and was responsible for the deaths of over 30 million people.

…yet here he is still portrayed as a saint-like figure who was deified as “the Sun on the East” - interesting article about his image here. Of course there are other ways one might *deify* him, but I would never stoop to such vulgar levels!

Enjoyed this post? Please subscribe to my RSS feed to stay up to date.

Yonghegong (Lama Temple)

Situated in the north-east of Beijing lies the Yonghegong temple and monastery of Tibetan Buddhism, being one of the largest and most important in the world. Having also survived the Cultural Revolution it’s now open to the public and on a bitterly cold Sunday morning last weekend I ventured there to watch the hordes of people coming to pay their respects on the final day of the Spring Festival.

Containing five elaborate archways and five main halls which house many Buddhas of various sizes (one being 18m tall!) and works of art, the temple courtyards were filled with the smoke of burning joss sticks (made of incense). Today around 70 lamas (Buddhist monks) still live in residence but how much of their time is split between tourist and spiritual activities I’m not sure! Surprisingly having huge buckets of flaming sticks right next ancient wooden structures, some dating back to 1694, didn’t seem to phase anyone.

Hero

Combined with snow covered rooftops and the slow dripping of water from their tapered edges it was reminiscent of a certain scene from Hero (minus flying Jet Li!)… how about that for a bit of cultural vandalism?

In Jean Baudrillard’s book “Simulacra and Simulation” (highly recommended) he talks about how a copy of something can eventually transcend the original. In the case of China one might ask if pseudo-historical fiction has replaced historical reality in popular culture? Turn on the TV here and you’d certainly this so… something I’ll save for a later discussion ;)

Enjoyed this post? Please subscribe to my RSS feed to stay up to date.

Freezing in Beijing

Last weekend brought with it a change in weather for Beijing - on Saturday it rained all day then overnight it snowed bringing with it white rooftops and freezing cold conditions in the morning. When I say freezing I don’t just mean colder than usual, I mean sub-zero frost-bitten fingers cold (around -8°C)!!

DSC_3532

DSC_3537

DSC_3538

Looks a bit grim and in fact was a bit grim! A good day to stay indoors you’d imagine? Not for yours truly - stay tuned for how I nearly froze to death in the name of culture and foolhardiness!

Enjoyed this post? Please subscribe to my RSS feed to stay up to date.

Tor

As many people know the Internet is fairly heavily censored in China. This can be annoying when you want to catch up on the news, look something up in an online encyclopedia or even just search. Of course there are plenty of ways around this, even for those with little technical understanding. My favourite is to use Tor, which consists of a network of virtual tunnels which bounce your requests randomly around the world (using distributed onion routing) providing both unfiltered access and anonymity.

Tor Network

Installing and setting up Tor is dead simple - check out the guide for instructions. You’ll notice that web pages take longer to load when using Tor due to the pages being sent via a “twisty, hard-to-follow route” but it’s better than a blank error page! I use the FoxyProxy extension for Firefox which allows you to setup rules for which sites are viewed over Tor, it will even try to automatically detect which pages are blocked and then route the connection appropriately - pretty cool stuff!

N.B. This technique not only applies to China but can be used anywhere in the world, so whether you’re in Belarus, Burma, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkmenistan Uzbekistan, Vietnam or just the UK it should still work.

P.P.S. For everything you could ever want know know about Google’s self-censorship check out this FAQ.

Happy uncensored surfing ^_^

Blocked RandomWire

Update (08/03): According to this site my site is blocked from China… actually it isn’t. Another good reason not to believe everything you’re told!

Enjoyed this post? Please subscribe to my RSS feed to stay up to date.




Close
Powered by ShareThis