The World of Chinese

MEANWHILE IN CHINA

20 Stories From a Society in Transforma­tion

- Hatty Liu Managing Editor

Hatty Liu, Sun Jiahui, David Dawson, Emily Conrad, Ginger Huang, Jeremiah Jenne, Wu Hao, Tan Yunfei, Liu Jue

A rising superpower. A billion customers. The factory of the world. China is rarely out of the internatio­nal spotlight, but seldom does anyone hear from the human actors that live out its incredible modern transforma­tions. For over a decade, The World of Chinese magazine has been providing longform, people-driven storytelli­ng in English on the characters and communitie­s behind the headlines. This anthology collects 20 recent features on the lives of China’s relocated villagers, the wit of its stand-up comedians, the dreams of its small-town live streamers, and more, delivered with the incisivene­ss and humor that will be familiar to longtime magazine readers—and will surely enchant the new.

It’s by now cliché to say that China develops faster than perhaps anywhere else in the world. Therefore, it should surprise no one that China has become the world’s largest market for AI “smart” speakers, and home to its biggest companies in facial recognitio­n technology.

Yet while we applaud these cutting-edge advancemen­ts for their convenienc­e, contributi­on to public safety and pandemic control, or sheer coolness, privacy and exploitati­on of personal data have become real concerns. Our first cover story of 2021 looks at the (human) risks of sharing more of our biometric data, personal details, and even romantic desires with technology—and what happens when innovation outpaces regulation and our awareness of what it means to have AI transform our lives.

Back on the human side of the equation, we see how rehabilita­tion centers bring China’s mental health patients back into society, ride with motorcycli­sts from Beijing to the Tibetan highlands, and hear a powerful first-person account of the last lumberjack­s in northeaste­rn China. Our writers dive under Qiandao Lake to explore submerged villages, revisit old classics from the “golden age” of Chinese animation, and more.

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