三级aa视频在线观看-三级国产-三级国产精品一区二区-三级国产三级在线-三级国产在线

  Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Will China join the culture club, or wield it?
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-10-25 09:48

Get ready for China's century: The astonishing pace of change in China touches every aspect of its existence.


Serena Williams greets fans at Chinese Open. [baidu]
As many challenges as this giant presents to the world, it faces an equal number within its borders. Hence the words in Chinese on our front page: AMBITIOUS, POWERFUL, upgoing...

"Wo ai Beijing," Serena Williams told a Chinese television audience in passable Mandarin: I love Beijing. And the Chinese love her, chanting "Sah-Reen-Na" and singing happy birthday -- in English -- as the American tennis star turned 23 at the China Open tournament last month.

Tennis isn't a sport for the masses here. But the crowd's devotion never wavered, even when Ms. Williams took umbrage at an official's call at the women's final and smashed her racquet into a bench. Cheered on by her Chinese fans, Ms. Williams rallied to defeat her Russian opponent and then, beaming, presented her replacement racquet to the mayor of Beijing.

A foreigner going out of her way to speak Chinese and kowtowing to a Chinese mandarin; a Chinese crowd embracing her foreign combativeness and singing in her language: It's all so 8th century.

And so 21st.

China reached its zenith in the Tang Dynasty (618-907 AD), one of the most open and confident periods in the country's history. Back then, the Middle Kingdom entranced the world, at least the parts that had heard of it, the way Hollywood mesmerizes us today.

Now, 1,100 years later, a newly confident and increasingly wealthy China is again opening up to outside influences. The question is: Who will be more affected, China, or the rest of the world?

Every great power -- Spain, France, Britain, ancient Greece, Rome -- exported its language and culture. Everyone is watching to see how China walks that path. Which language will dominate the world in 25 years, English or Chinese? Whose culture will reign supreme, America's or China's? Are we on the cusp of a new world order, or could we all end up with a hybrid blend of both worlds?

To be sure, it's hard to predict the cultural-linguistic future. No one in 1759 imagined that losing a single battle at the Plains of Abraham would ensure the decline of French culture and language in North America. Or in 1945 that a handful of refugees from Europe would create a pop culture in Hollywood that within a half-century would spread American English, mannerisms, values -- the whole idea of cool -- to the rest of the world.

But certainly the 19th-century idea that everyone would one day speak English is dead. In the past decade, English has declined as a native language from 9 per cent to just 5 per cent of the world's population. The global penetration of U.S. culture aside, Chinese is already the most-spoken language in the world, with three times as many native speakers as English. And through the diaspora, rather than old-fashioned colonization, the Chinese language is spreading into other countries. In Canada, for example, it's now the third most spoken language, after English and French, according to government statistics.

Soon, Chinese could be chosen ahead of English as a second language by people around the world, says David Graddol, managing director of The English Company and the author of a study on this topic.

"In the next decade, the new 'must-learn' language is likely to be Mandarin," Mr. Graddol told the Independent in London.

Many of the major population increases of the past century took place in China, not in English-speaking countries. Now, the Internet and satellite television allow immigrants to stay in touch with their mother tongue. With China's population already the world's largest, it will be impossible to ignore when its economy overtakes that of the United States. In Asia, businesses whose employees are not multilingual will find themselves at a disadvantage. Already, they're looking beyond English.

In Beijing alone, 50,000 foreign students are learning Chinese. That's a drop compared to those studying English worldwide, but way up from the two Westerners -- myself, the lone Canadian, and an American teenager from Yale University -- who were learning Chinese there in 1972. (We kept company with one wounded Palestinian guerrilla fighter, two Laotians and nine North Koreans.) Already, the current contingent of Canadian students in Beijing is so huge it recently inspired a Friends-like Chinese television sit-com called Vancouver.


Page: 123



Zhang Ziyi's Hong Kong u-turn in interview
Zeta-Jones sues over image on topless web site
Ashlee Simpson paying lip service to fans
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Nation opposes US arms sales to Taiwan, Hu says

 

   
 

China trade to reach US$1.1 trillion in 2004

 

   
 

Nine provinces may face winter blackouts

 

   
 

Housing price up 13% in first three quarters

 

   
 

Kerry leads Bush in paper endorsements

 

   
 

Insurance firms get greenlight on stocks

 

   
  Zhang Ziyi's Hong Kong u-turn in interview
   
  Zeta-Jones sues over image on topless web site
   
  In-flight mobile phone use to be banned
   
  Ashlee Simpson paying lip service to fans
   
  Give up your bus seat, next ride is free
   
  The game of love lost by singer Na Ying
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Feature  
  Face to face with Chinese director Wang Xiaoshuai  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产精品福利一区二区 | 一级大黄美女免费播放 | 在线看黄色网址 | 国产精品看片 | 超级成人97碰碰碰免费 | 狠狠色丁香婷婷综合最新地址 | 97久久天天综合色天天综合色 | 亚洲国产精品va在线观看麻豆 | 丁香六月婷婷精品免费观看 | 国产欧美日韩精品一区二 | 中文一级国产特级毛片视频 | 久久久免费的精品 | 你懂的网站在线播放 | 精品欧美一区二区三区在线观看 | 一级午夜免费视频 | 久久精品无码一区二区三区 | 欧美成人三级伦在线观看 | 国产成人盗拍精品免费视频 | 国产成人精品免费视频 | 91天堂97年嫩模在线观看 | 色综合中文| 久草在线新首页 | 成人性色生活影片 | 2021久久精品永久免费 | 女人一级一级毛片 | 久久91精品国产91久久小草 | 国产欧美日韩综合精品二区 | 人人草人人干 | 伊人思思| 欧美变态口味重另类日韩毛片 | 久草91| 爽爽爽爽爽爽a成人免费视频 | 国产日韩精品欧美一区视频 | 成年免费大片黄在线观看一 | 免费亚洲一区 | 亚洲福利视频一区二区 | 香蕉网站狼人久久五月亭亭 | 国产精品久久久久影视不卡 | 国产成人啪午夜精品网站男同 | 国产精品久久精品 | 黄色激情视频网站 |