Scholar

Graeme Smith

H-index: 21
Political science 40%
Sociology 20%
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
Shamanism has become a tourist draw as a form of cultural and religious heritage, with a shamanic theme park 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...(2/3)
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
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. (1/3)
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
Our episode on China’s incel community explored discourse on gender expectations in Chinese society. @qianhuang.bsky.social from the University of Groningen weighs in on how state and incel perspectives differ on articulating women’s roles.

Listen to the full episode: omny.fm/shows/the-li...
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
In our most recent episode, we examine the history and development of incel culture on China’s internet. Guests Ling Tang, @qianhuang.bsky.social and Yihuan Zhang provide insights into where online misogyny takes place and give us an introduction to terminology from China’s manosphere.
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
In our episode on the Chinese manosphere, guests @qianhuang.bsky.social and Ling Tang answer the question, is there a Chinese Andrew Tate? How does Chinese online misogyny compare to Tate’s arguments?

Listen to the full episode: omny.fm/shows/the-li...
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
How does the Chinese manosphere compare to the Western one? In our latest episode, guests @qianhuang.bsky.social and Ling Tang weigh up on similarities and differences between incel discourse across cultures.

Listen to the full episode: omny.fm/shows/the-li...
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
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, graduate researcher at the University of Macau, Ling Tang, cultural studies lecturer at the University of Melbourne... (2/3)

by Graeme SmithReposted by: Louise Edwards

littleredpodcast.bsky.social
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. (1/3)
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
In our most recent episode, guests Gareth Fisher and Chien-Peng Chung contemplate the intersection of Buddhism and power in both China today and in the past. (1/2)
Buddhism, Power, and the Chinese State "This is not something new, it's the scale. In the Republic of China, there was an interest in using religious heritage to promote soft power. Even during the (Mao) era, there was interest in opening up temple sites for foreign visitors, especially from Buddhist countries, as diplomacy." - Fisher on whether Buddhism as soft power is new for China “Overseas temples is a diplomatic tool. It's not just selling Buddhism, it's promoting Chinese culture. 
The learning of Chinese language for chanting, of course. People are attracted to the temple because they can learn Chinese and maybe get some free food.” - Chung on Shaolin temples as soft power or a business tool? “There are many lay practitioners, nuns, monks who desire to missionize Buddhism in China and overseas. It's very difficult to tell to what extent someone in the Chinese Buddhist Association is simply doing what the government wants, and how much that's what they want to do.” - Fisher on the Chinese Buddhist Association’s autonomy
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
What does President Xi Jinping think about Buddhism? With the rise of Buddhism in China, this question looms large. Back in 2014, Xi gave a speech at UNESCO speaking to the impact of Buddhism on China, the first time a PRC leader had given a pro-religious speech. (1/2)

by Graeme SmithReposted by: Thomas D. Carroll

littleredpodcast.bsky.social
In our latest episode, we examine Buddhism's adoption by China's people and the state. Shaolin Temples have been built overseas to promote Buddhism, authorised by its leader Shi Yong Xin. Yet Shi has caught global media attention this week with news he is under investigation for corruption. (1/2)
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
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… (2/3)
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
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. (1/3)
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
From our latest episode, a different opinion on the status of ideology, specifically Marxism, in today’s China. Alison Sile Chen Zhao questions how prominent Marxism ever was to the PRC to start with.

Listen to the full episode: omny.fm/shows/the-li...
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
What does Marxism mean in today’s China? How can the Chinese Communist Party’s ideology be described in 2025? Professor @chenggang-xu.bsky.social of Standford University attempts to answer this question in this excerpt from our latest episode.

For the full episode: omny.fm/shows/the-li...
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
There were fears China could block the export of rare earths, over which it has a stranglehold. How close are we to that nuclear option? To find out, Louisa and Graeme were joined by @martijnrasser.bsky.social, a former senior intelligence officer and analyst with the CIA... (2/3)
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
With China's rare earth strategy proving significant to ongoing trade wars, we reflect on a 2023 episode exploring the topic. Beijing's 2023 ban on the export of two rare metals represented the latest front in the global battle to control chipmaking technology. (1/3)
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
and Professor ‪@chenggang-xu.bsky.social‬, 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. (3/3)

To listen to the full episode: omny.fm/shows/the-li...
The Garbage Time of History: Is China Still Marxist? - The Little Red Podcast
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 borrowe...
omny.fm
littleredpodcast.bsky.social
... 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, (2/3)

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