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In China’s bookstores, self-help manuals tower over fiction and history, reflecting a society under intense pressure to adapt, compete, and succeed. Translations of American guides on management and personal growth sell briskly, even as the Communist Party urges readers toward homegrown models of “positive energy,” including the writings of Xi Jinping himself. In this episode, we explore why advice literature has such deep roots in Chinese culture, how classical texts are being reread as manuals for self-improvement, and what this hunger for guidance reveals about life in a fast-changing, high-stakes economy. The story suggests that China’s self-help boom is less about optimism than necessity—a search for tools to navigate a system where formal education rarely feels sufficient.
https://www.economist.com/china/2020/11/12/why-self-help-books-are-so-popular-in-china
By HSIn China’s bookstores, self-help manuals tower over fiction and history, reflecting a society under intense pressure to adapt, compete, and succeed. Translations of American guides on management and personal growth sell briskly, even as the Communist Party urges readers toward homegrown models of “positive energy,” including the writings of Xi Jinping himself. In this episode, we explore why advice literature has such deep roots in Chinese culture, how classical texts are being reread as manuals for self-improvement, and what this hunger for guidance reveals about life in a fast-changing, high-stakes economy. The story suggests that China’s self-help boom is less about optimism than necessity—a search for tools to navigate a system where formal education rarely feels sufficient.
https://www.economist.com/china/2020/11/12/why-self-help-books-are-so-popular-in-china