Jiaqi Luo
Sep 16, 2020

Gen-Z conservatism is changing fashion in China

In the midst of a global pandemic and a 21st-century cold war, Chinese culture has looked inward and is taking conservative turns on multiple fronts

Cartier’s Qixi campaign captioned an image as “father and son” to avoid censorship.

Please sign in or register

Access limited free articles a month after free, fast registration.

Existing users sign in here

Forgotten Password?

Having trouble signing in?

Contact Customer Support at
[email protected]
or call+852 3175 1913

Related Articles

Just Published

4 hours ago

SCMP's pop-up exhibit: A 120-year ode to Hong Kong

From quills to pixels, the South China Morning Post pays homage to heritage and chronicles Hong Kong's storied saga.

5 hours ago

Tech MVP 2023: Eric Yu, GrowthOps

MOST VALUABLE PROFESSIONAL: Eric Yu’s varied and impactful career trajectory has seen him ascend to regional general manager from a systems engineer—all before 30.

5 hours ago

Vero launches Rover, an AI-first PR agency

The newly launched agency will deploy generative-AI tools such as ChatGPT, Midjourney, and Firefly to accelerate and automate content creation across various media formats.

5 hours ago

Tech MVP 2023: Presenting the Most Valuable Products

A jury of tech leaders has named three technologies as Most Valuable Products in marketing communications in Asia-Pacific.