Hello again! I hope you're doing good
I'm truly fascinated by your photography and videos of Chongqing and I have decided to visit China in the future, in fact I am already studying chinese! I have a couple questions, I'm not sure if I'm asking the right person here, but you seem to travel a lot so I thought I could ask, how can I approach learning about china and its language? I am studying through youtube courses (and of watching various videos about life over there) but I am missing a vital part, which is culture, I was wondering if you know or know someone/something that could help me with culture?
that's all, again, thanks for the photography, the pictures are so good!
I was fortunate to begin my journey learning Chinese and all things China in college (and ended up getting a PhD in East Asian Studies--long story!), so I would recommend starting with a formal education in a University setting if possible. Studying abroad through a program like CET or CIEE or working in China as an English teacher are also fantastic and genuinely life-changing opportunities.
If those are not an option, for language, the first thing I would recommend is downloading the dictionary app Pleco, which is easily the greatest Chinese learning resource ever made. It is free to use and comes prepackaged with a lot of features, but you can also pay one-time fees to add additional dictionaries and other functions (it is the only app I have ever spent money on in my iPhone!). I have used it for fifteen years now and have accumulated over 30,000 flashcards!: https://www.pleco.com/
For culture, textbooks like Ebrey and Walthall's East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History (2014) and Rana Mitter's Modern China: A Very Short Introduction (2016) are helpful primers for familiarizing yourself with the culture and history of China. While these textbooks are now a little outdated, you should be able to find them for free online (if you know where to look).
One thing that has fundamentally changed about the Chinese language-learning landscape since I first started in 2011 is the number of resources available online: There are countless language programs and individual Chinese teachers who offer courses and advertise their programs on Instagram and TikTok; even just by following their accounts you should be able to make a lot of progress, as they often teach a lot of basic but very useful vocabulary and grammar.
As I first started learning Chinese a long, long time ago, the scope of my recommendations may be somewhat limited (and outdated), but hopefully this is a helpful start!













