www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Why power of honghuang drove netizens crazy?

By Thorsten J. Pattberg (chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2016-08-11 15:43

Why power of honghuang drove netizens crazy?

Screenshots capture a series of facial expressions of Chinese swimmer Fu Yuanhui during an interview with CCTV after the women's 100m backstroke semifinal on August 8, 2016. [Photo/IC]

What have ancient?Taoism and the internet got to do with women's 100-meter backstroke swimming final at the 2016 Rio Olympic Games? Everything!

"Really, was I?that fast?" said Fu Yuanhui about her?seemingly effortless performance in the pool. The 20-year-old came in an unexpected third in the 100m backstroke semifinals on Monday (she won the bronze medal the next day).

Interviewed?by a China Central TV sports journalist at edge of the pool, the slightly embarrassed yet evidently overjoyed Fu explained: "It must have been the?li of honghuang!" Twenty-four hours later, Fu had become a?Weibo?star, with thousands of remix videos, motivational posters and image macros.

Li is usually translated as "power". But what is the "power of honghuang"? In Chinese philosophy, honghuang is the "primitive universe". It is, varying from story to myth to TV adaptation (we’ll come to that in a minute), at least 4,000 to as much as 50 million years old and filled with mythical beasts such as Kunpeng the bird, Qilin the giraffe and the kitchen god Chau.

Call li a hidden,?superhuman ability if you will — or better still, "the force". According to Taoism canon, in the beginning there was chaos, a prehistoric fiction, the foundation of the solar system perhaps. George Lucas famously borrowed many key Taoist elements — qi became "The Force" — for his multimillion-dollar space saga Star Wars ("Star Wars is Taoism in American garb": China Daily, 24 Dec, 2015).

Acting flabbergasted and?thus?memorable and most entertaining, Fu put Chinese power?into a Greek institution. A proud?fan said:"The Greeks invented the Olympic Games, but the Chinese win at it!"

Followers immediately recognized the "power of honghuang" from the recent TV drama Journey of Flower. In it, a Taoist immortal, Bai Zihua (played by Wallace Huo), wonders whether his love interest, the powerful she-demon Hua Qiangu, "can be made?not to use her awesome strength", or at least "resist her primitive powers for now". The Taoist show became a sensation in China, reaching?hundreds of millions of viewers.

As suggested, most Americans are already very familiar with "primitive power", but through Americanized names. In East Asia, however, Taoism naturally makes sense with moviegoers, gamers and geeks. Akira Toriyama, the Japanese creator of the global Dragonball franchise,?accidentally?caused one of the greatest "Tao power memes" when in one episode a villain?inquired?about?"Gout's power level" and learned that "it's over 9,000". Goku, of course, is a Taoist immortal (and Buddhist deity) modeled after China’s Sun Wukong — the celestial Monkey King. It means that Tao power is simply?over the top and totally off the scale — even the best illustrators and cartoonists know that!

The humor in this global quest to find ever richer puns and slang for explosive awesomeness?across all disciplines?knows no cultural boundaries. Laozi once said: "The Tao that can be?described?is not the Eternal Tao." It's perhaps the vaguest, most comical, yet exceedingly versatile "motivational philosophy" that's ever been penned: "Tao acts like water, it does not resist … it conquers all!" He could also have said: "Tao works best in the pool."

Now you might say good-old Taoist literature, or all the Chinese?philosophy we’ve paraphrased above, is largely unbeknownst, or trivial, to most sports commentators in the East and West. Albert Einstein, Leo Tolstoy and early European Union proponents were effectively layman Taoists, but then who recalls.

With the internet now being the ever fast-forward, fast-paced dispenser of new?cultures and traditions in the world, however, it was perhaps symbolic, and certainly satisfying,?to learn that the mysterious "power" helped a down-to-earth,?world class backstroke?specialist.

The author is a German writer and cultural critic, and author of The Euro-Tao.

Most Viewed Today's Top News
The unique loanwords in our daily life By zoe_ting

In our daily life, more and more loanwords appear and change our habits in Chinese expression. Loanwords sound very similar with their original English words, and the process of learning them is full of fun to foreign students.

Going "home" for the first time in four years By SharkMinnow

It has been a while since I've contributed to this Forum and I figured that since now I am officially on summer holiday and another school year is behind me I would share a post with you.

...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产成人18黄网站在线观看网站 | 欧美日韩精品一区二区免费看 | 精品国产免费一区二区三区 | 精品一区二区高清在线观看 | 久草视频免费在线播放 | 九九综合九九综合 | 亚洲国产欧美精品一区二区三区 | 亚洲成人偷拍自拍 | a级精品九九九大片免费看 a级毛片免费观看网站 | 自拍一页| 日韩有码第一页 | 无遮挡一级毛片私人影院 | 日本久久久 | 一级毛片黄片 | 性欧美欧美巨大69 | 欧美一级aa天码毛片 | 狠狠色丁香久久婷婷综 | 热99re久久精品这里都是免费 | 一级毛片在播放免费 | 性a视频 | 精品一区二区影院在线 | 免费看a视频 | 亚洲国产夜色在线观看 | 91免费公开视频 | 国产视频软件在线 | 欧美a级毛片 | 各种偷拍盗摄视频在线观看 | 欧美一级免费看 | 久草视频资源 | 福利片成人午夜在线 | 99免费在线播放99久久免费 | 亚洲精品久久久午夜伊人 | 久久99亚洲精品久久久久 | xxx国产老太婆视频 xxx欧美老熟 | 国产成人免费视频精品一区二区 | 久久精品久久久久 | 日韩精品一区二区三区不卡 | 久久亚洲国产最新网站 | 国产自线一二三四2021 | 手机看片国产免费久久网 | 成年女人看片免费视频频 |