Sinica Podcast

Yi-Ling Liu on The Wall Dancers: China's Internet, Its Creative Spirits, and the Art of the Possible

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Feb 25, 2026
Yi-Ling Liu, journalist and author of The Wall Dancers, maps Chinese online life through vivid personal stories. She explores the metaphor of “dancing in shackles,” early netizen optimism, hip hop and sci‑fi’s rise and co‑optation, feminist activism and crackdowns, and how censorship and moderation became human and industrial. Short scenes show creativity and constraint colliding in China’s digital sphere.
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ANECDOTE

Gay Talese Strategy Unlocked A Founder's Story

  • Yi-Ling Liu used a Gay Talese style reporting tactic to profile Ma Baoli by interviewing ex-employees, users, investors, and community members.
  • Her initial PR approach was rebuffed in 2019, so she built a richer portrait via secondary sources before Ma later agreed to be interviewed for the book.
ANECDOTE

Lan Yu Sparked A Generation's Coming Out

  • Lan Yu, adapted from an online novella Beijing Story, became a generational coming-out touchstone for queer men in China.
  • The film's depiction of queer love and its backdrop around the 1989 era gave many readers a cathartic sense of not being alone.
INSIGHT

Pragmatism Fueled The Internet's Growth

  • Pragmatism defined both users and officials: activists and entrepreneurs learned to 'code switch' between communities and authorities.
  • Liu shows this adaptability enabled creativity and incremental change, as platforms and censors negotiated tolerances.
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