May 25, 2010
Part One Point Five
The China beat goes on:
Some notes on the People’s Republic before the second chapter on the Fabled C[hinese]hipster…
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Wu Yulu’s amazing mechanical men:
After suffering a series of life changing set backs such as a burnt down home, spraying himself with battery acid, and experiencing great financial debt—all in the name of art—Chinese farmer Wu Yulu is finally gaining some recognition for his homemade robots.
DB also has a gallery of Wu Yulu’s ‘Peasant Da Vincis’ for Cai Guo-Qiang’s inaugural exhibition at the newly restored Rockbund Art Museum in Shanghai; some images interpolated below (cue egregiously ironic juxtaposition of images + text):
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Chinese news site Southern Weekend recently sent intern Liu Zhiyi undercover at the Shenzhen site of Foxconn, “the world’s biggest contract electronics maker and a major supplier to Apple, Dell, Hewlett-Packard and other companies,” which has been under scrutiny for the suicides of nine workers this year (more background info at NYT):
I know of two groups of young people.
One group consists of university students like myself, who live in ivory towers and kept company by libraries and lake views. The other group works alongside steel machineries and large containers, all inside a factory of high-precision manufacturing environment.
–Liu Zhiyi, Southern Weekend via Engadget
The translated article is definitely worth reading, though the Apple connection clearly raises the profile of these otherwise-overlooked incidents.
Skeptics (or fans of Apple) have taken to pointing out that this suicide rate, in a plant with four hundred and twenty thousand workers, is no higher than that in a Chinese city of comparable size.
–Evan Osnos, Items of Interest, Letter from China blog on the New Yorker, May 25 2010
On a lighter note:
“I hear that Americans can buy anything they want, and I believe it, judging from the things I’ve made for them,” Chen said. “And I also hear that, when they no longer want an item, they simply throw it away. So wasteful and contemptible.”
–Chinese Factory Worker Can’t Believe The Shit He Makes For Americans, The Onion
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Essay Question (10 pts): To what degree does electronic music reflect the alienation of technology and hyperindustrialization?
Let me take this opportunity to explain my music. At first I liked drums, they were fast and noisy and that’s what I first produced. After a while I listened to more electronic, quieter music. I like fast music, but it’s more melodic as a general rule. I added more melody into my music, more baritone. My latest work has slowed down in comparison to my older music. In the past it’s always been very young, punkish, full of joy. Now, I like slower, blacker, darker music. Also, I like the Chinese influence. I cant explain it, I just like it. I add a little bit of Chinese music in everything.
–Sulumi, via Intel×Vice’s Creators Project
via Wired
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A few more for good flavor:
- Wild Wild Westernization: “16 Items They Only Sell at Chinese Walmarts” (Buzzfeed)
- A glimpse into a Chinese toy factory.
Filed under: China · Tags: Apple, Art, China, chinese music, HCB, Li Wei, memes, photography, sculpture, Shanghai, Sulumi, Technology, video, Wu Yulu





