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China from the Inside
Content:Documentary Film
Available From:PBS Video
Media Type:DVD
Release Date:2006
Audience:High School
Running Time:240 minutes
Physical Description:1 videodisc (ca. 240 min.) : sd., col. ; 4 3/4 in.
Language:English
Author:KQED Public Television
Resource Library Number:EACDVD 59
ISBN: 079369311X; 9780793693115
Subject:Anthropology and Sociology
History
Politics and Government
Science, Technology, & the Environment
Subheading:Corruption
Environment & Policy
History, Modern (19th-20th Century)
Social & Political Protest
Social Change
Region:East Asia
Country:China
Tibet



Abstract:

A series of four documentaries that survey China through Chinese eyes to see how history has shaped them, and where the present is taking them. || "Episode I: Power and the People. How does the Communist Party exert control over 1.3 billion Chinese? Are village elections a chance for people to take a share in power? Can the party end the rampant corruption and keep the people's trust? Chinese people, from farmer to Minister, speak frankly about the problems the country faces and the ways forward. || Episode II: Women of the Country. China's women are argued over at their weddings and have one of the highest suicide rates in the world. Now many are beginning to fight for their rights and their futures. This hour shows discrimination against Xinjiang's Muslim women, various hardships faced by Tibetan women, and the status of some of those who have left the countryside for factory work in the cities. || Episode III: Shifting Nature. China's environment is in trouble, but solutions often seem as harsh as the problems. A third of the world uses water from China's rivers, but rapid industrialization and climate change have led to bad air, polluted rivers and dire water shortages. One 'solution' that has received considerable media attention in the West is the channelling of water in the biggest hydraulic project in world history. While it has benefited nearly half a million people, relocation from dam areas is causing mammoth social upheaval. || Episode IV: Freedom and Justice. Religious worship in China is problematic for Tibetan Buddhists, Catholics separated from Vatican influence, the 40 million adherents of China's unofficial churches, and the Falun Gong. Civic problems include forced evictions, government cover-up of AIDS, corruption and land grabbing. Filmed in Tibetan temples, newspaper offices and a labor camp, this final episode asks: what are the limits of freedom--and the threats to stability?" --Press Release || Educator resources available at http://www.pbs.org/chinainside




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