ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Asia

Chinese millennials 'lying flat' doing nothing, worries Beijing

Beijing [China], July 5 (ANI): Young people in China have set off a nascent counter-culture movement that involves lying down and doing as little as possible and Beijing is not happy about it.

ANI Jul 05, 2021 08:26 IST googleads

Representative image

Beijing [China], July 5 (ANI): Young people in China have set off a nascent counter-culture movement that involves lying down and doing as little as possible and Beijing is not happy about it.
Five years ago, Luo Huazhong discovered that he enjoyed doing nothing. He quit his job as a factory worker in China, biked 1,300 miles from Sichuan Province to Tibet and decided he could get by on odd jobs and USD 60 a month from his savings. He called his new lifestyle "lying flat", reported The New York Times.
"I have been chilling," Luo, 31, wrote in a blog post in April, describing his way of life. "I don't feel like there's anything wrong."
He titled his post "Lying Flat Is Justice," attaching a photo of himself lying on his bed in a dark room with the curtains drawn. Before long, the post was being celebrated by Chinese millennials as an anti-consumerist manifesto. "Lying flat" went viral and has since become a broader statement about Chinese society.
Elsie Chen, writing in The New York Times explained that to lie flat means to forgo marriage, not have children, stay unemployed and eschew material wants such as a house or a car. It is the opposite of what China's leaders have asked of their people.
A generation ago, the route to success in China was to work hard, get married and have children. The country's authoritarianism was seen as a fair trade-off as millions were lifted out of poverty.
But with employees working longer hours and housing prices rising faster than incomes, many young Chinese fear they will be the first generation not to do better than their parents.
They are now defying the country's long-held prosperity narrative by refusing to participate in it, wrote Elsie.
Luo's blog post was removed by censors, who saw it as an affront to Beijing's economic ambitions. Mentions of "lying flat" -- tangping, as it's known in Mandarin -- are heavily restricted on the Chinese internet. An official counter-narrative has also emerged, encouraging young people to work hard for the sake of the country's future.
"After working for so long, I just felt numb, like a machine," Luo said in an interview. "And so I resigned."
While plenty of Chinese millennials continue to adhere to the country's traditional work ethic, "lying flat" reflects both a nascent counter-culture movement and a backlash against China's hyper-competitive work environment, reported The New York Times.
Xiang Biao, a professor of social anthropology at Oxford University who focuses on Chinese society, called tangping culture a turning point for China.
"Young people feel a kind of pressure that they cannot explain and they feel that promises were broken," he said. "People realize that material betterment is no longer the single most important source of meaning in life", said Xiang.
The ruling Communist Party, wary of any form of social instability, has targeted the "lying flat" idea as a threat to stability in China.
Censors have deleted a tangping group with more than 9,000 members on Douban, a popular internet forum. The authorities also barred posts on another tangping forum with more than 200,000 members, wrote Elsie.
In May, China's internet regulator ordered online platforms to "strictly restrict" new posts on tangping, according to a directive obtained by The New York Times.
A second directive required e-commerce platforms to stop selling clothes, phone cases and other merchandise branded with "tangping."
The state news media has called tangping "shameful," and a newspaper warned against "lying flat before getting rich", reported The New York Times. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

US

Ending Iran's nuclear ambitions over oil profits: Trump clarifies

Ending Iran's nuclear ambitions over oil profits: Trump clarifies

In a post by the White House, President Trump, while acknowledging that the United States is currently the world's leading oil producer and stands to benefit financially from higher crude prices, emphasised that his administration's overriding mission remains the permanent dismantling of Iran's nuclear program.

Read More
Europe

Growing empowerment of women reflects changing social landscape

Growing empowerment of women reflects changing social landscape

In her statement, Bhat said new pathways to empowerment are emerging across the Union Territory, supported by government initiatives and community participation.

Read More
Asia

Tibetan Women’s Association organises protest against China

Tibetan Women’s Association organises protest against China

It's an event to remember the day when Tibetan women from all three provinces of Tibet, for the first time in the history of Tibet, stood together and raised their voice against the brutal Chinese military forces that were occupying Tibet in 1959.

Read More
Asia

India’s Consul General meets Ant Group to boost tech ties

India’s Consul General meets Ant Group to boost tech ties

India's Consul General in Shanghai, Pratik Mathur, met Ant Group leadership to discuss fintech and digital economy opportunities. This follows high-level engagements with Shanghai's Mayor, aligned with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "Reform, Perform and Transform" mantra to strengthen bilateral and multilateral cooperation through the SCO and BRICS.

Read More
Middle East

Iran warns of attack on ports in West Asia

Iran warns of attack on ports in West Asia

IRIB Quoted the official as saying, "If any attack is carried out against Iran's economic ports, all docks, ports, and economic zones across West Asia will be destroyed."

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.