| CARVIEW |
-
For Chinese Writers, a Room of Their Own on Fifth Avenue
Accent Sisters Builds a Community of Chinese Writers and Artists in New York
Accent Sisters is a New York publisher, bookstore, event space, and online network dedicated to fostering Chinese and Asian diaspora creative writing and culture. It is a strong facilitator and participant in the Chinese cultural scene organically growing throughout cities around the world that is changing the meaning of being “Chinese.”Founder Li Jiaoyang, a poet and visual artist, told me that she and her co-founders “wanted to build a community space to help writers like us, because we found... Read full story>>
-
A Family Derailed: On Writing ‘Trains’
A Q&A with Zha Jianying
Zha Jianying, Jeremy Goldkorn & more
ChinaFile recently published “Trains: A Chinese Family History of Railway Journeys, Exile, and Survival,” by Zha Jianying, the journalist and author of some of the most memorable recent books on contemporary China and particularly Chinese culture. This is a lightly edited, abridged transcript of a conversation between Zha Jianying and ChinaFile Editor-in-Chief Susie Jakes and Editorial Fellow Jeremy Goldkorn.ChinaFile: Trains opens with a joyful, cinematic scene of you as a kid, a tough girl... Read full story>>
-
The Sichuan Pepper Guy
A Q&A with Yao Zhao, Founder of 50Hertz Tingly Foods
Yao Zhao is the founder of 50Hertz Tingly Foods, a company that sells Sichuan peppercorns (花椒, huajiao) and a variety of oils and snacks made with them. His first career was in clean energy development and rural electrification, but last year he left his World Bank job to devote himself full time to his startup and to proselytizing on the joys of tingly condiments.He is an exemplar of a trend of young Chinese people opening restaurants and launching food brands outside of China that broaden the... Read full story>>
-
How Will China Respond to Maduro’s Capture?
A ChinaFile Conversation
Parsifal D’Sola Alvarado, Brian Hioe & more via ChinaFile Conversation
On January 3, the U.S. military captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife in a nighttime raid on Caracas and flew him to New York to face drug trafficking charges. Trump announced the U.S. would temporarily “run” Venezuela until a transition of power occurs. Beijing immediately released a statement condemning the U.S.’s “blatant use of force against a sovereign state and its actions against the president of another country,” and a similar statement at the United Nations on... Read full story>>
-
“The Dating Game” in China
A Q&A with Filmmaker Violet Du Feng
Jeremy Goldkorn & Violet Du Feng
Violet Du Feng has produced and directed more than a dozen documentary films about China. Her latest is The Dating Game, which premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Filmed in Chongqing, the film follows a group of desperate bachelors participating in a dating “boot camp.”In this Q&A, Feng talks about how a film about women inspired her to make a film about men, the problems facing China’s many young single men, especially those from lower economic classes, their “incel” peers in... Read full story>>
-
‘Mistress Dispeller’
A Q&A with Filmmaker Elizabeth Lo
The new documentary feature film Mistress Dispeller probes the unraveling and redemption of a marriage at breathtakingly close range. Director Elizbeth Lo follows Teacher Wang, a professional “mistress dispeller,” as she counsels a middle-aged wife undone by her husband’s infidelity and unspools a covert plan to rid them of his lover. The film is currently playing at the IFC Center in New York through October 30. ChinaFile’s Susan Jakes spoke with Lo about how she made the film. Their... Read full story>>
Recent Stories
Notes from ChinaFile
11.04.25
A New Global Scene for Independent Chinese Film
Jeremy GoldkornMedia
11.04.25
ChinaFile Presents: ‘Made in Ethiopia’
Features
10.03.25
A Surrogacy Silk Road: Chinese Parents Head West for Babies
Emma BelmonteViewpoint
09.18.25
China’s Birth Crisis Is a Crisis of Faith in the Future
Emma ZangFeatures
06.30.25
The Locknet: How China Controls Its Internet and Why It Matters
Jessica Batke & Laura EdelsonMedia
06.30.25
How the Internet Works, and How China Censors It
Laura Edelson & Jessica BatkeFeatures
11.12.24
Trains: A Chinese Family History of Railway Journeys, Exile, and Survival
Zha JianyingViewpoint
10.16.24
Where the Malan Blooms
Yangyang ChengMedia
11.01.23
ChinaFile Presents: China Reporting in Exile
Annie Jieping Zhang, Li Yuan & moreExplore the Site
The NYRB China Archive
01.10.12
The New York Review of Books China Archive
from New York Review of BooksPhotography & Video
Video
10.31.17
Down From the Mountains
Max DuncanPhoto Gallery
07.12.16
A Cold War Island Thaws
Sim Chi YinPhoto Gallery
10.05.16
Beijing’s Skinheads
Zhu Mo from JiemianBooks
Books
02.24.20
Fateful Triangle
Tanvi MadanBooks
08.06.14
China’s Second Continent
Howard W. FrenchNotes from ChinaFile
Notes from ChinaFile
01.21.26
For Chinese Writers, a Room of Their Own on Fifth Avenue
Jeremy GoldkornNotes from ChinaFile
01.13.26









