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8 - Claiming the Past, Presenting the Present, Selling the Future: Imagining a New Beijing, Great Olympics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2020

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Summary

A new Beijing greets visitors to the 2008 Summer Olympic Games, a Beijing invigorated and transformed since it was awarded the Games seven years ago. The city has recovered its great cosmopolitan heritage as a meeting point for peoples, trade and ideas. Bold new structures have risen into the skyline. In the streets and behind closed doors, Beijing seethes with an economic and cultural ferment that makes it one of the most exciting cities on earth.

Foreword of the booklet Olympic City by the Beijing Foreign Cultural Exchanges Association

The Olympics have made Beijing even more magnificent, so magnificent that I could not recognise it.

‘The Beijing in the Olympics time’, on the television programme Hong Kong Connection (11 August 2008)

The city of Beijing features significantly in promotional materials for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games. A telling example is the Beijing Olympics emblem, ‘Chinese Seal, Dancing Beijing’. Its wide circulation during the Olympics has left an imprint on people's minds: whenever one sees the symbol, one is reminded of the Olympic City, Beijing. Beijing was not only a host city, it was also a symbol assigned with national significance. The Beijing that was connected to the Olympic moment intended to be a city that conjured up positive memories for Beijing residents and Chinese citizens, as well as the diaspora and the world at large.

A key Olympic slogan – literally ‘New Beijing, New Olympics’ (新北京, 新奧运) – indicated how the state envisioned the role of Beijing: a ‘new’ Beijing brought a ‘new’ Olympics that marked a ‘new’ Chinese era. Beijing needed to dress up, with new clothes, to present a new and fresh outlook to welcome the world to China. The English version of this slogan differs from its Chinese version: ‘New Beijing, Great Olympics’. The reason for this is probably that it would be considered too immodest to claim to produce a ‘new Olympics’ in English. Suffice to say that by emphasising the word ‘new’ in its Chinese slogan, thus predominantly addressing the Chinese, the official material drew discursive power from a prevailing discourse in China that celebrated the idea of ‘new’ and progress (Zhang 2000; de Kloet, Chong et al. 2008).

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Chapter
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Spectacle and the City
Chinese Urbanities in Art and Popular Culture
, pp. 135 - 156
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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