エピソード

  • The Lead Goose: China’s AI Embrace
    2025/11/04

    In the latest episode in our series on belief, we’re looking at the CCP’s faith in Artificial Intelligence. China has embraced AI like no other nation, laying out a plan for AI that would see 70 percent adoption across six sectors - including governance – within the next two years. This aggressive approach is driven by commercial imperatives, the desire to shape international standards, and the hope that AI will solve the Party’s biggest worry: social stability. To explore China’s AI dreams, Louisa and Graeme are joined by China Media Project’s Alex Colville, who also writes the China Chatbot newsletter on Lingua Sinica, and Daria Impiombato, a senior analyst at the Mercator Institute for China Studies.

    Image: Goose, c/- Andy Hazel, 2025

    Transcripts are available at https://ciw.anu.edu.au/podcasts/little-red-podcast

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    53 分
  • Wolf Spirits and Wild Shamans: The Revival of Spirit Mediums
    2025/10/07

    In the latest episode in our series on belief, we’re exploring the surprising revival of shamanism in China, which has made a comeback despite Mao's best efforts at eradication. Ritual healers and spirit mediums are tapping into online believers and a public thirst for authentic spirituality. Shamanism has also become a tourist draw as a form of cultural and religious heritage, with a shamanic theme park even existing in northeast China until 2021. To explore the diversity of shamanic practices across China and their survival in the face of official scepticism, Louisa and Graeme are joined by Feng Qu, an archaeologist from Nanjing Normal University and Mayfair Yang, a cultural anthropologist from UC Santa Barbara.

    Image: Totem poles at the Changbai Mountain Nayin Tribe Shamanic Culture Tourist Resort. Feng Qu, February 2023.

    Transcripts available at https://ciw.anu.edu.au/podcasts/little-red-podcast

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    51 分
  • Man Up: The Rise and Rise of China’s Manosphere
    2025/08/20

    In the latest in our series on belief, we’re examining the emergence of incels in the world’s largest manosphere. China’s growing incel community is fuelled by state-approved nationalism and simple demographics—by one estimate, 30 million Chinese men won’t find a life partner. To find out why so many Chinese men believe that women are the source of their problems, Louisa and Graeme are joined by Yihuan Zhang, a graduate researcher at the University of Macau, Ling Tang, a cultural studies lecturer at the University of Melbourne, and Qian Huang from the Centre for Media and Journalism Studies at the University of Groningen.

    Image: Incel. c/- MissLunaRose12 - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0

    Transcripts available at https://ciw.anu.edu.au/podcasts/little-red-podcast

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    36 分
  • Karma Chameleon: The CCP turns to Buddhism
    2025/07/22

    Continuing our series on belief in China, we look at the revival of Buddhism, which is being embraced by citizens and the Chinese state. While temple visits increase, the state is funding temples and martial arts academies from Nepal to Tanzania. As Xi Jinping extols Buddhism with Chinese characteristics, the Chinese state is leveraging Buddhism diplomacy to its advantage. To find out more, Louisa and Graeme are joined by anthropologist Gareth Fisher from Syracuse University, the author of From Comrades to Bodhisattvas, and political scientist Chien-Peng Chung from Lingnan University in Hong Kong.

    Image: c/- Bitter Winter. Weibo image of Xi Jinping visiting Hongjue Temple, 18 June 2024.

    Transcripts available at https://ciw.anu.edu.au/podcasts/little-red-podcast

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    49 分
  • The Garbage Time of History: Is China Still Marxist?
    2025/06/26

    In the latest in our series on belief, we’re looking at China’s official belief system—Marxism. In recent years, netizens have argued China has entered the ‘garbage time’ of history, a phrase borrowed from the dying minutes of a basketball game, which now references a crisis of trust in the Communist Party and its official ideology. To ask whether Marxism still exists in China, and how Marx influences the Chinese state, we’re joined by two guests: Alison Sile Chen Zhao, a University of California political analyst and the author of Her Battles, and Professor Xu Chenggang, a senior research fellow at the Stanford Center on China's Economy and Institutions, and the author of Institutional Genes: Origins of China’s Institutions and Totalitarianism.

    Episode art: Portrait of Karl Marx. c/- Wikimedia Commons.

    Transcripts available at https://ciw.anu.edu.au/podcasts/little-red-podcast

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    42 分
  • China on the Couch: Xi Jinping's Psy-boom
    2025/04/01

    In our third episode on beliefs and ideologies, we explore China’s newfound enthusiasm for psychiatry. Counselling was only registered as a profession in 2001 yet has seen a massive boom under Xi Jinping. The psy-boom is such that even party branch meetings are doing mindfulness exercises, and practitioners are trying to indigenise counselling practices. There’s plenty to work on; the 2022 China Mental Health Survey found seven percent of the population were suffering from depression, half of them schoolchildren. To explore what’s drawing China to the couch, Louisa and Graeme are joined by Yiying Xiong, a counsellor and associate professor at John Hopkins University, Barclay Bram, an audio journalist at the Economist and fellow at the Asia Society, and medical anthropologist Hsuan-Ying Huang, from Taiwan’s National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University.

    Image: c/- Wikimedia Commons, Sigmund Freud's Couch, London, 2004.

    Episode transcripts are available at: https://ciw.anu.edu.au/podcasts/little-red-podcast

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    48 分
  • Let's Get Spiritual: State, Digital Spirituality and Feng Shui in China
    2025/02/05

    To welcome the Year of the Snake, we’re launching a new series looking at belief in China. Young Chinese people are increasingly turning to spirituality - even online manifestations of it - and feng shui, in this moment of high unemployment and economic stress. For a Party guided by materialism, this spike in spiritual interest presents a dilemma: how to regulate something you purport not to believe in. To discuss the state's use of spirituality from the Qing to now, we’re joined by Tristan Brown, a historian at MIT and author of Laws of the Land: Fengshui and the State in Qing Dynasty China and Haoyang Zhai, a researcher at the University of Melbourne.

    Image: “May The Snake Be With You” c/- Juliette Baxter

    Episode transcripts available at https://www.thechinastory.org/lrp/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    47 分
  • Sisters doing it for themselves? Marriage Refusal and Little Milk Puppies
    2025/01/13

    China is in the grip of a gender war. While government officials are texting and even cold calling women to urge them have children, the fertility rate continues to drop. Better educated and often better paid their male peers, many urban Chinese women are simply choosing not to marry. To discuss the growing female backlash to the Party’s pro-natal policies, Louisa and Graeme are joined by Chloe Mofei Shen, lifestyle director of Elle China and Qiqi Huang, post-doctoral fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies at the University of Macau.

    Image: “Marrying late has many advantages”, BG E15/716, Landsberger Collection, 1975.

    Show transcripts available at https://www.thechinastory.org/lrp/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    44 分