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Sinica Podcast

Fan Yang on fakes, pirates and shanzhai culture

Sinica Podcast

Kaiser Kuo

Currentaffairs, Business, News, China Politics, Shenzhen, Chinese, Chongqing, China News, Politics, China, Culture, Sichuan, Hangzhou, Beijing, International Relations, China Economy, Chengdu, Film, Shanghai, Guangzhou

4.7 • 710 Ratings

🗓️ 22 September 2016

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Fakes, knockoffs, pirate goods, counterfeits: China is notorious as the global manufacturing center of all things ersatz. But in the first decade after the People’s Republic joined the World Trade Organization in 2001, a particular kind of knockoff began to capture the public imagination: products that imitate but do not completely replicate the designs, functions, technology, logos and names of existing branded products. An old Chinese word meaning “mountain fortress” — shanzhai — was repurposed to describe this type of knockoff. Chinese internet users began to use the word shanzhai with a degree of approval. This was partly because shanzhai products, though aping the designs and names of established brands, often add innovations that the originals lack. This is particularly notable with mobile phones, the shanzhai versions of which were among the first to feature more than one camera lens and the capacity to use two SIM cards from different networks. Starting around 2008, the creativity and speed of release of such knockoff products began to be discussed as a type of innovation with Chinese characteristics and a creative approach suited to a poor country developing at breakneck speed. This episode of Sinica is a conversation about shanzhai and the whole universe of Chinese knockoff culture with Fan Yang, an assistant professor in the Department of Media and Communication Studies at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and the author of the book Faked in China: Nation Branding, Counterfeit Culture, and Globalization. You can read the SupChina backgrounder here. Recommendations: Jeremy: A Guide to the Mammals of China, edited by Andrew T. Smith and Yan Xie; A Field Guide to the Birds of China, by John MacKinnon and Karen Phillipps, in collaboration with He Fenqi; Beijing Bird Guide (野鸟图鉴), edited by Gao Wu. Fan: The Zhongshuge Bookstore in Hangzhou; Wei Zhuang, a branch of the famous Zhiweiguan restaurant (established in 1913) in Hangzhou. Kaiser: Underground Airlines, by Ben Winters. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:40.8

Start your free 30-day trial at audible.com slash Wondery UK.

0:45.7

That's audible.com slash Wondery UK. Welcome to the Cynica podcast, weekly discussion of current affairs in China, produced in partnership with SUPChina.

1:05.4

SubChina is a great way to stay on top of China news in a few minutes a day with a daily email newsletter, a mobile phone app,

1:11.8

and a website, sub-China.com. It's a feast of business, political, and cultural news about a nation

1:18.1

that is reshaping the world. I'm coming to you today from Washington, D.C., the notorious

1:23.3

Ginguumi, Jeremy Goldcorn, is at home in Nashville, Tennessee, and joins us from there.

1:29.3

How are you, Jeremy?

1:30.5

Very well, indeed.

1:31.3

It's a beautiful, steamy late summer day here in Nashville, which the locals complain about,

1:36.8

but I think is the best weather ever.

1:39.1

I can't imagine why you could like that, but we're kind of celebrating the fact that the end of summer is nigh,

1:45.9

Labor Day is upon us.

1:47.1

It's terrible.

...

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