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Scientia Sinica

Podcast by Scientia Sinica

English

News & politics

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About Scientia Sinica

This show explains China’s economic trends, political shifts, and social changes using evidence from published research. Then we switch gears for China Stories—engaging, easy-to-enjoy narratives about life and society on the ground. Perfect for listeners who want to learn about China through both reliable analysis and memorable stories.

All episodes

11 episodes

episode When Iran Wobbles: How China Calculates Risk in a World of Conflict artwork

When Iran Wobbles: How China Calculates Risk in a World of Conflict

As internal pressures mount on governments around the world, international partners are often forced to make quiet but consequential choices. This episode examines how China approaches political instability in Iran, drawing on analysis from leading U.S. scholars and situating the case within China’s broader foreign policy behavior. Using insights from a Brookings Institution article by Ryan Hass (Director, John L. Thornton China Center) and Allie Matthias (Research Analyst, China Center), the podcast explores how Beijing balances rhetoric, economic interests, and strategic caution when a key partner faces potential regime instability. Rather than escalation or direct intervention, China’s approach emphasizes sovereignty, non-interference, risk management, and flexibility — patterns that can also be observed across other global conflict zones. This podcast is based on and inspired by the following Brookings Institution analysis: “How is China positioning itself as Iran’s regime teeters?” By Ryan Hass and Allie Matthias Brookings Institution 👉 https://www.brookings.edu/articles/how-is-china-positioning-itself-as-irans-regime-teeters/ [https://www.brookings.edu/articles/how-is-china-positioning-itself-as-irans-regime-teeters/?utm_source=chatgpt.com]

5 Feb 2026 - 3 min
episode Christmas in China: Why It's More Complicated Than You Think artwork

Christmas in China: Why It's More Complicated Than You Think

Christmas in China is often misunderstood.For some, it looks like a sign of Westernization.For others, it seems suddenly restricted or discouraged.But the real story is more complicated — and it has been unfolding for years.This podcast draws on academic research to explain how Christmas became popular in China as a secular, commercial, and cultural phenomenon, and why its public expression has been re-evaluated and curtailed in recent years.At the center of this discussion is the scholarly article:Li, Liping & Zhang, Gaoyuan (2010).“A reflection on ‘Christmas fever’ in China in the globalizing world.”International Journal of Sociology and Anthropology.In their study, Li and Zhang argue that Christmas in China was never primarily about religion, but about globalization, consumer culture, and cultural adaptation. This podcast builds on their argument and places it in dialogue with more recent developments — including school bans, retail curtailments, and the rise of cultural confidence and political scrutiny toward foreign symbols.Together, these perspectives help us understand a broader question:Festivals are never just about holidays.They are about who defines meaning — and who decides which symbols belong.

25 Dec 2025 - 5 min
episode How Chinese State Media Portrays the United States : A 20 Year Analysis artwork

How Chinese State Media Portrays the United States : A 20 Year Analysis

Why does Chinese state media repeatedly portray the United States as a nation in decline?This podcast is based on the peer-reviewed article “America the Failure? Critical Narratives of the United States in Chinese State Media” by Christopher Carothers and Joshua Freedman, published in The China Quarterly (2024).🔗 Read the original research article here:https://doi.org/10.1017/S030574102400... [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbkxFM0lQSXU5dDBFbUs3dGlrZ0JrVmhhZ3ZiZ3xBQ3Jtc0tuQnpFZVZOcUN3UXVVdDlPTzI3dWp2dUJaMXNIcWFvc0lKMGZUY2Q2YVlNUC01SVJtcVluaVZfbHJMNVlua1U1Rk4zVjktWUF2NkRwTENpS1poWFNsNEh0Vlh3OE5VYlNqbU9aeHJlSmIteTJlSnVaRQ&q=https%3A%2F%2Fdoi.org%2F10.1017%2FS0305741024001528&v=cCjZGQ2CZzo]Drawing on the study’s analysis of 1,761 editorials published in People’s Daily from 2003 to 2022, we reveal the three major narratives that shape China’s portrayal of the United States — the U.S. as a dangerous hegemon, a society with failing values, and a superpower in political, economic, and moral decline.This podcast explains how these narratives evolved, intensified during the U.S.–China trade war, and ultimately serve a purpose the authors call “relative legitimation” — strengthening China’s domestic political story by contrasting America’s perceived weaknesses with China’s own stability and rise.In this podcast, you will learn:Why Chinese state media focuses so heavily on American declineHow geopolitical tensions shaped media narratives after 2018The three core narrative frames used to describe the U.S.How China portrays its own success through contrastWhat these narratives reveal about the future of U.S.–China relationsThis video is ideal for viewers interested in geopolitics, Chinese media, political communication, international relations, and narrative framing.#China [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/china] #USA [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/usa] #Geopolitics [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/geopolitics] #USChinaRelations [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/uschinarelations] #ChineseMedia [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/chinesemedia] #Propaganda [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/propaganda] #Documentary [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/documentary] #InternationalRelations [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/internationalrelations] #GlobalPolitics [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/globalpolitics] #PoliticalNarratives [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/politicalnarratives]

10 Dec 2025 - 8 min
episode Behind the Tension: Why China–Japan Can’t Walk Away From Each Other artwork

Behind the Tension: Why China–Japan Can’t Walk Away From Each Other

Why do China and Japan remain locked in a cycle of tension, cooperation, and uneasy stability? In this podcast episode, we break down the deeper forces behind today’s dispute — and explain why neither country can afford to walk away.Drawing on insights from Rumi Aoyama, one of the leading scholars on China–Japan relations, we explore how this relationship is held together by economic interdependence, yet constantly tested by political friction and strategic mistrust. Aoyama reminds us that China–Japan ties follow a familiar pattern: periods of calm, followed by sudden fragility, and eventually a return to stabilization.Here's the link to the article: Aoyama, R. (2023). Stability and Fragility in Japan-China Relations: China’s Pivotal Power and Japan’s Strategic Leverage. China Review, 23(1), 187–211. https://www.jstor.org/stable/48717993 [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqa3hadF9Qa3BkeWxiLUYwd1ZfTERfTEVuR3NKUXxBQ3Jtc0tsSUp2TUpyVTlhQTF5X2RCYmpWdXBDSkw4cDVqSDdoYUUtUEZIcDl5bS15aWtrMjdwNTN2OVRiMlRjLW80bDlodlFwQVJWcktsN3NWX2J1OTIyZU1wRjNQQUFQZWpQTzlDZ0dZQ2tQMVNBeHNub3dLTQ&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jstor.org%2Fstable%2F48717993&v=-OPMtkYQwio]Each crisis looks serious. Each dispute feels like a potential breaking point.But in reality, both nations remain tied together through trade, investment, supply chains, and regional security dynamics.🔍 In this episode, we cover:The roots of the latest China–Japan disputeWhy economic interdependence acts as a stabilizing forceHow political narratives make tensions appear worse than they areRumi Aoyama’s perspective on the cycles of stability → fragility → stabilizationWhy a complete rupture is unlikely — even during moments of high tensionWhat to expect next in the China–Japan relationship🌏 Why This MattersChina and Japan aren’t just neighbors — they are two of Asia’s largest economies, deeply connected through trade and regional supply chains. Disruptions between them affect markets, investment, technology, and global geopolitics. Understanding how their relationship really works helps us make sense of the headlines behind the headlines.📚 Source & InspirationThis video draws on the work of Professor Rumi Aoyama, whose research highlights that China–Japan relations are not defined by crisis alone, but by a long-term structure of mutual dependence, strategic caution, and recurring tension cycles.👍 If you enjoy content on China, Asia, and global geopolitics:Please follow and leave a comment!

29 Nov 2025 - 7 min
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