F Newsmagazine - The School of the Art Institute of Chicago - Art, Culture, and Politics
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China

Book Review: “The Secret Listener”

With a literary voice tuned to the unique melody of bilingual fluency, Yuan-Tsung Chen memoir tracks the upheaval of mid-century China.

News in Brief: November 21, 2021

This week’s news stories from SAIC, Chicago, the United States, and the world.

SAIC Beat S04E02 – Zhisheng Wu on destruction and preservation

Season 4 continues with a sculptor who repurposed the remnants of destruction to create something new.

和你 Flow: SITE’s Hong Kong Exhibit Sparks Controversy

An inflammatory email, a wall of protest notes: inside the controversy at SAIC's student-run gallery.

“Closely Monitoring the Situation”: The Saga of COVID on Campus

Tracking the "unprecedented" changes at SAIC and in higher education, so far.

The Chinese Critique Salon

How one extracurricular salon creates its own critique space.

Apple, China, and the Great Firewall

How Apple became an accessory to Chinese government censorship.

A Drop In the (Plastic) Ocean

In the face of global corporate pollution, what impact do our individual sustainability choices really have?

Extradition Objection: Protests in Hong Kong

SAIC students on the importance of the protests in Hong Kong.

Cold Water, Hot Food: A Chinese Student Adjusts to America

Adjusting to life in the United States is not easy — but it is possible.

News Briefs

Police anonymity in the Paul O'Neal case; a giant bus in China; and the everlasting disappointment of Frank Ocean.

What the F Are We Reading?

Keeping You Up-to-Date With What the F Staff is Reading Online

Prestige Recruits

What Makes an Education at SAIC So Appealing to International Students?


An in-depth exploration of what factors have lead to the rise in Chinese international enrollment in the U.S. and at SAIC.

Your English degree may mean nothing here, but you can make it in China

In spite of the over sixty thousand Americans already teaching English in China, English teaching is still the most popular and the most sorely needed position for foreigners. As a result, China has become an excellent place for the wayward liberal arts educated westerner to begin their life.