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Winning and Losing in Modern China

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Winning and Losing in Modern China

Peeps,

5 min read
5 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

In China, there are the Gao Fu Shuai – the tall, rich and handsome – and then there are the self-proclaimed Diaosi.

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Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Eye Opening

Recommendation

The literal translation of the Chinese term diaosi is inappropriate to discuss here; suffice it to say that the insult emerged from Internet gaming obscurity. But now a majority of China’s young men proudly identify as diaosi. Based on personal conversations with these self-proclaimed losers, anthropologist Graham Candy’s article explains the phenomenon and what it teaches about Chinese society. getAbstract recommends this rich glimpse into Chinese culture to readers interested in modern masculinity, middle-class mediocrity, corruption, gaming and digital vigilantism.

Summary

Chinese president Xi Jinping began his reign in 2012 touting the concept of Zhong Guo Meng, or the “Chinese Dream.” He outlined aspirations, intent to energize the nation’s youth to continue China’s growth. This generation had benefited from China’s unrestrained economic expansion since the 1980s. They are mobile, educated and have more opportunities than their parents could have imagined. But approximately 25% of Chinese don’t share Xi’s optimism – the portion of the population that identifies as diaosi. The term roughly means “loser.” It describes someone...

About the Author

University of Toronto doctoral student Graham Candy is a Canadian anthropologist. He studies the effects of the Internet on modern social relations.


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