The New Citizen

More and more Chinese live in a nation that looks nothing like it did a decade ago. The transformation rivals anything envisioned in Mao Zedong’s revolutionary credo of 60 years ago, yet it has also highlighted new “contradictions among the people,” forcing a widespread search for novel forms of social harmony.

Raising Frogs: A Tea-seller's Story

Photo by Rebecca Davis

Thanks to China's booming economy, more Chinese can afford gourmet tea these days, and Ye Huabin says his business is on the rise. Once a tea farmer in Fujian province, Ye now runs two tea shops in Beijing.

Hip-Hop in Beijing

The Foot Style Rockers, a Beijing-based break dancing crew that participate in battles and jam sessions around the city that draw the best nearby talent. China’s growing hip-hop community is still small enough that a local break crew can organize events with some of the scene's top players.

Ebb and Flow - What is Old Becomes New Again

For a generation raised on MTV rather than Mao Zedong Thought, Buddhism, along with other traditional Chinese ideologies such as Confucianism and Taoism, offers young people a way to reconnect with their Chinese identity in the face of increasing globalization.

Religion in China

Taoism, Buddhism and Confucianism each find their niche within China's evolving religious landscape.