March 17, 2026

1 thought on “C-pop is rising to a worldwide stage

  1. As a Hongkonger, I was dismayed by some points in this article. It is baselessly asserted that “Cantonese pop and [Hokkien] pop were merged with Mandopop.” It is one thing to suggest that Cantopop and Hokkien pop are on the decline, but it is categorically false to claim that they are merging with Mandopop. Hokkien, Cantonese, and Mandarin are not even mutually intelligible.

    Secondly, it is claimed that “wars” have “forced” the aforementioned merger after the 1980s and 1990s. I’m not sure which wars are being referred to. As far as I’m concerned, there weren’t any wars in China in that time period which would have affected the position of Cantopop and Hokkien pop.

    Thirdly, the article conflates Mandopop with mainland China pop music. Mandopop has existed in many places outside of mainland China, e.g. Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia well before the recent boom in popularity of mainland Mandopop. Hokkien pop refers to pop in the Hokkien language and is completely different from Taiwanese Mandopop.

    Also, I’m not sure why it is suggested that Cantopop has government support whereas Mandopop does not. Even if we only refer to mainland Mandopop, from my understanding, the HKSAR Government does not have any policies to promote Cantopop that are not present in mainland China. And (correct me if I’m wrong) Cantopop concertgoers in other countries still mostly comprise of people from Cantonese-speaking overseas Chinese communities.

    BTW, it’s Jackie Chan*.

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