Cities - The Real Shanghai 1 of 2 - BBC Travel Documentary
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Uploaded on Feb 6, 2011
Cities - The Real Shanghai 1 of 2 - BBC Travel Documentary, recorded 16.10.2010 There's no place in China quite like Shanghai.
There are no summer palaces, fog-enmeshed temples or cliff-side Buddhas here. Remnants of traditional culture remain, but to dwell there would be to miss the point entirely. Shanghai has never been about what has already happened - it is about what is going to happen.
For millions of Chinese, Shanghai is more than just a city. It is a symbol of change, opportunity and sophistication.
While Beijing may pull the country's strings, Shanghai is the pacesetter. It revels in its glamorous airs and entrepreneurial flair, in its global reach and ability to synthesise and adapt new ideas to home-grown tastes.
Haven
Tangled together with these positive associations are the memories of the foreign concessions.
Established after the First Opium War (1839-1842), they were loathed by many as centres of imperialism and exploitation, but simultaneously valued as havens of intellectual freedom and stimulation - a place to break with stifling Confucian mores and learn about the world outside.
Those looking to introduce change in imperial China - whether social, political or technological - flocked to them. The Chinese government aims to make the city an international financial centre to rival Hong Kong by the year 2020.
Despite the positive changes that came out of the concessions, Shanghai was no paradise, with high levels of poverty and crime. The birth of the People's Republic of China in 1949 marked the end of both Shanghai's depravity and splendour.
Cleaned up and reined in, Shanghai fell into a deep sleep.
It wasn't until three decades later that Deng Xiaoping lit the spark for China's current economic explosion, casting aside ideology in favour of pragmatism - famously summed up in his earlier declaration, 'It doesn't matter if a cat is black or white, as long as it catches mice'.
Special economic zone
Although Shanghai was initially passed over in favour of special economic zones that were easier for Beijing to control, it eventually got the green light to accept foreign investment in the 1990s.
This is when the blueprint for the city's future was first laid out. Today's frenzied rate of change is all part of a plan by the Chinese government that aims to make the city into an international financial centre to rival Hong Kong by the year 2020.
What at first seemed like an errant fantasy no longer appears to be so far fetched. At a social level, Shanghai is hardly an international city that can compare with Hong Kong or Singapore - China has been insulated from the rest of the world for too long.
Built from scratch
Many more people in Shanghai embrace a Western lifestyle
But overall, anyone who has seen the transformations of the past fifteen years - both the efficient metro system and the entire financial district of Pudong were built from scratch - cannot help but tip their hat.
And while some bemoan the destruction of traditional residences and historic buildings, no-one is complaining that the overall living standards have risen dramatically. More than any other place in China, Shanghai is electrified with its youthful optimism and prospects.
The best way to get acquainted with Shanghai past and present is to take a walk down the Bund. Originally a towpath for dragging barges of rice, the Bund waterfront became the seat of colonial power in the early 20th century, when it was home to the city's landmark hotels, banks and financial houses.
Mothballed during the Communist years, it is only in the past decade that the strip has become re-enamoured with its stupendous real estate value. Today the old buildings house designer restaurants and the flagship stores of some of the world's most exclusive brands.
Facing the Bund is the stupendous skyline of Pudong, the 'dragon's head' or financial hub not only of the Yangtze Basin, but of all China. The Bund is at its best in the early morning, when the locals are out practicing tai chi, or in the early evening, when both sides of the river are spectacularly illuminated.
for more information, see http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes... .
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Top Comments
catsed123 5 months ago
That's because Chinese isn't the primary language for communicating. The only reason people in China are learning English is because it is the world's default language. Person A's first language may be Italian, and Person B's first language may be Spanish, but chances are if they meet they'll both end up speaking English. Americans just happen to be lucky enough to have English be their first language. If the main language of the world was Mandarin, I bet most Americans would be fluent.
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persianOUTKAST 7 months ago
b/c Chinese (Mandarin) is the most spoken language in the world. 2nd is Spanish, 3rd is English, 4th is Hindi (including all dialects), & 5th is Arabic ... these spots keep shifting around depending on what study you cite, but the bottom line is most of the people in the world speak Chinese, NOT English. Also, w/ the rest of the world's economy failing & the Chinese economy booming, it might be useful in a few years when they overtake us all (ok, last part was a joke, but it could happen).
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Video Responses
All Comments (101)
LittleRubberSquare 1 week ago
I don't think that lucky because many then never gets to learn a second language :/
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Suzhou Expatlife 3 weeks ago
Shanghai Airport Transportation
shanghai-suzhou-transfers.webs.com/transfer-services
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rcharlesish 1 month ago
The male presenter has a retarded accent
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Elsa Shien 2 months ago
Actually most of locals can't speak english,the video which show you who speak english just from the expensive area and high-lever Chinese:) But more and more younger generation in China speak more english than older.
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mobcat40 3 months ago
English is a simple language compared to most and given it's primary use in two top GDP nations it naturally becomes the top international second language. And if we go by experience, I have yet to understand 1 biochemistry grad student who comes here from China to lecture or work. I cannot understand a thing they're saying in English =P. And no most Chinese do not know English self reported numbers are 22% but the economist reports those people don't know much more than some basic phrases.
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