Besides just bringing up all of Mao's horrors, one article I read is a good example of this.
The author was a Chinese entertainment journalist who had seen Kung Fu Panda 2, and said it displayed traditional chinese values, traditions, and morays better and more morally than anything that she had ever produced in China. She was a bit angry and confused why only the Americans, using cartoon characters, were able to do this, and not the people of China.
If you have to look to Jack Black for a Romantic Traditionalism, you are truly in a Modernist or Post-Modernist hellscape.
Besides just bringing up all of Mao's horrors, one article I read is a good example of this.
The author was a Chinese entertainment journalist who had seen Kung Fu Panda 2, and said it displayed traditional chinese values, traditions, and morays better and more morally than anything that she had ever produced in China. She was a bit angry and confused why only the Americans, using cartoon characters, were able to do this, and not the people of China.
If you have to look to Jack Black for a Romantic Traditionalism, you are truly in a Modernist or Post-Modernist hellscape.
Correction, "morays" is "mores."
Hmmm. I think I may have been taught wrong.
It is pronounced "morays"
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/mores
Noted, thank you.