Close Menu
Technophile NewsTechnophile News
  • Home
  • News
  • PC
  • Phones
  • Android
  • Gadgets
  • Games
  • Guides
  • Accessories
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Web Stories
    • Press Release
What's On
How to Back Up Your iPhone to iCloud, MacOS, or Windows (2026)

How to Back Up Your iPhone to iCloud, MacOS, or Windows (2026)

27 March 2026
10 Things You Can Do While Waiting in the TSA Line

10 Things You Can Do While Waiting in the TSA Line

27 March 2026
Sony temporarily suspends memory card sales due to shortages

Sony temporarily suspends memory card sales due to shortages

27 March 2026
AI Research Is Getting Harder to Separate From Geopolitics

AI Research Is Getting Harder to Separate From Geopolitics

27 March 2026
The Best Office Chair Is  Cheaper Than We’ve Seen Before

The Best Office Chair Is $50 Cheaper Than We’ve Seen Before

27 March 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Friday, March 27
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Technophile NewsTechnophile News
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • PC
  • Phones
  • Android
  • Gadgets
  • Games
  • Guides
  • Accessories
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Web Stories
    • Press Release
Technophile NewsTechnophile News
Home » You’ve Never Heard of China’s Greatest Sci-Fi Novel
News

You’ve Never Heard of China’s Greatest Sci-Fi Novel

By News Room20 January 20263 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
You’ve Never Heard of China’s Greatest Sci-Fi Novel
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Ma’s moment arrived in 2011. On July 23, two high-speed trains collided near Wenzhou, killing 40 people. The accident traumatized the nation for what it seemed to reveal about the costs of China’s breakneck pace of development. A prominent essay captured the mood, its title becoming a rallying cry: “China, Slow Down, Wait for Your People.” The prose read almost like prayer: “China, please stop your flying pace, wait for your people, wait for your soul, wait for your morality, wait for your conscience!”

Ma and other Industrial Party voices responded with a counteroffensive. The solution wasn’t to slow down but to double down, they said—to learn from mistakes, to push through the difficult phase when new technologies were still being mastered. And key to their campaign was Lingao itself. The writing of it became a phenomenon across Chinese internet forums in the 2010s: Its open source ethos and collaborative methods deeply appealed to China’s burgeoning tech community. Beyond regular meetups among core contributors, Lingao’s creation fostered the formation of China’s “keyboard politics”—online communities where users engage in fierce debates about governance, policy, and national direction under the protection of pseudonyms. These conversations became staging grounds for political arguments that couldn’t happen elsewhere, where amateur policy wonks, military enthusiasts, and armchair strategists honed their worldviews. In 2012, the nationalist commentary website Guancha (think of it as China’s Breitbart) was founded, and its complex entanglement with Industrial Party thought and personnel networks demonstrated how far Lingao’s influence extended beyond mere time-travel fiction.

Industrial Party ideology ends up being quite Darwinian. What matters most is the power that flows from industrial capacity. This contributes to what scholars refer to as the party’s “aesthetic.” Fred Gao, a Beijing-based journalist who identifies with the Industrial Party and who briefly worked for Guancha, told me: “These people view industrialization as the highest form of beauty. Building things from nothing—that’s their romanticism.”

Of course, the techno-nationalist impulse transcends borders. “Elon Musk is the ultimate Industrial Party figure,” Gao said. Musk’s vision of colonizing Mars, his impatience with regulation, his worship of engineering solutions, his conviction that making physical things matters more than anything else—his “aesthetic has strong resonances with the Chinese Industrial Party,” Gao said. What differs is simply the political system that channels it.

Almost nobody, including me, can finish all the chapters of Lingao (to say nothing of the more than 1,400 derivative works). It’s not just that it’s too long. Reading it is quite painful. The novel’s language and narrative structure are aggressively anti-literary. To write beautifully would be bourgeois, the Industrial Party seemed to believe. Technical descriptions veer into what feels like self-indulgence, an uncomfortable disregard for readers without STEM backgrounds.

The book asks questions like: How do you solve energy problems when you can’t drill for oil? How do you begin mechanization without the machine tools to make machine tools? How do you produce nitric acid when you’re starting from literally dirt? From Chapter 22, as the 500 time travelers plan their expedition to colonize Lingao County in Hainan (the southern island in China):

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related News

How to Back Up Your iPhone to iCloud, MacOS, or Windows (2026)

How to Back Up Your iPhone to iCloud, MacOS, or Windows (2026)

27 March 2026
10 Things You Can Do While Waiting in the TSA Line

10 Things You Can Do While Waiting in the TSA Line

27 March 2026
Sony temporarily suspends memory card sales due to shortages

Sony temporarily suspends memory card sales due to shortages

27 March 2026
AI Research Is Getting Harder to Separate From Geopolitics

AI Research Is Getting Harder to Separate From Geopolitics

27 March 2026
The Best Office Chair Is  Cheaper Than We’ve Seen Before

The Best Office Chair Is $50 Cheaper Than We’ve Seen Before

27 March 2026
Wait, the Trump phone might actually exist

Wait, the Trump phone might actually exist

27 March 2026
Top Articles
The Best Blind Boxes You Can Buy Online

The Best Blind Boxes You Can Buy Online

15 January 202631 Views
Solawave Wand Fans: Don’t Miss This Buy One, Get One Free Sale

Solawave Wand Fans: Don’t Miss This Buy One, Get One Free Sale

9 January 202626 Views
The US claims it just strongarmed Taiwan into spending 0 billion on American chip manufacturing

The US claims it just strongarmed Taiwan into spending $250 billion on American chip manufacturing

15 January 202624 Views
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Don't Miss
Wait, the Trump phone might actually exist

Wait, the Trump phone might actually exist

27 March 2026

Last week I issued a reminder that Trump Mobile’s T1 Phone does not exist, and…

Iranian Hackers Breached Kash Patel’s Email—but Not the FBI’s

Iranian Hackers Breached Kash Patel’s Email—but Not the FBI’s

27 March 2026
The White House has an app now, and Trump wants you to report people to ICE on it

The White House has an app now, and Trump wants you to report people to ICE on it

27 March 2026
Review: Samsung Galaxy S26 and Galaxy S26+

Review: Samsung Galaxy S26 and Galaxy S26+

27 March 2026
Technophile News
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2026 Technophile News. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.