sqbr: pretty purple pi (Default)
Sean ([personal profile] sqbr) wrote2020-09-24 02:40 pm
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Miscellaneous links

Dream Boy And The Poison Fans (Transcript) The connection between Xiao Zhan, the actor who played the lead in The Untamed, the AO3 getting banned in China, and the related back-and-forth of fan-groups attacking each other. ffa has some folk who blame him/his management a lot more for what happened (and some who fiercely disagree), I am way too ignorant about China to weigh in but it's all very interesting.

Beyond Authenticity: the Spectre of Han Hegemony On the simplistic discussions around Mulan.

China bars media coverage of Disney's 'Mulan' after Xinjiang backlash.

To me it feels like a lot of Western companies have this overly simplistic, and often racist, idea of what it means to Appeal to Chinese Sensibilities, and end up alienating everyone. I've been getting into Chinese web-novels lately (specifically The Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation, the m/m fantasy novel that was adapted into the Untamed) and even just from that can tell the situation over there with censorship and social attitudes is really complex.

I know I’m late The author of 'Love, Simon' talks about how being put in the 'problematic straight person profiting from queer experiences' box made it incredibly difficult and painful to navigate figuring out and being open about her bisexuality. 'Own Voices' is all well and good but people apply it in overly rigid ways that end up hurting marginalised writers who don't fit the narrow expectations on Diverse Writing.
muccamukk: Lt Bush looking through his spy glass, which reflects back stars. (HH: I See Stars)

[personal profile] muccamukk 2020-09-24 12:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I remember at the time being surprised that AO3 had lasted as long in China as it had. For over 6 months before hand they'd been flooded with Chinese fans because the government had shut down most of the Chinese-run sites. It almost felt like they were herding people onto AO3 to shut that down too and get the community all at once. But that's probably attributing more organisation than was occurring. So though only some of that about Xiao Zhan was known in English fandom at the time of the ban (and I didn't realise it was THAT Xiao Zhan until I listened to the NPR thing), I was 0% surprised that China had blocked AO3, and didn't think that the fan blow up was a determining factor, especially.

Though I remember finding the narrative that the Chinese M/M-lite shows were a Great Blow against Chinese censorship! Justice! pretty irritating.