Looking at the reaction across the country, it is easy to imagine so. The covers of the memorial newspapers, nicely collected in collage by Chinese blogger Hecaitou (H/T Danwei), are reminiscent of the stark and shocked reporting that followed 9/11. The nationwide outpouring of solidarity (also here) and charity and the celebration of heroic rescue workers is also reminiscent of 9/11.
There are other parallels as well. China is no stranger to sweeping catastrophe and mass fatality, but this is the first disaster of this scope of China's post-reform period. That makes it China's first true mass-media disaster and, in parallel with 9/11 in the US, China's first Internet disaster, shared in real-time across the entire country and around the world. In fact, considering technological developments since 2001, the Internet plays a much more important role in the public experience of China's quake than it did for 9/11, which was largely defined by television images.
Weblog with daily updates of the news on a frugal, fair and beautiful China, from the perspective of internet entrepreneur, new media advisor and president of the China Speakers Bureau Fons Tuinstra
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Sichuan earthquake as China's 9/11
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1 comment:
There is no comparison between 9/11 and China's earthquake. 9/11 was an attack on American soil by foreigners, whereas the China earthquake was a natural disaster. The loss of life in both are equally sad, but the 9/11 attack and the China earthquake still do not compare. It is better to compare natural disaster to natural disaster (i.e. Indonesia tsunami and China earthquake).
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