China’s scary looking dragon stamp
On 5 January every year in China, a commemorative
stamp of the corresponding year’s Chinese Zodiac character is released to
celebrate the coming lunar New Year. It is an event not unlike the
unveiling of new pair of Air Jordans.“People started lining up outside the post office around 4 a.m.,” Ms. Feng, a post office worker in Beijing. “We kind of felt
sorry for them, having to stand out in such bitter cold.”It was a scene
duplicated all over China and this year’s stamp — honoring the dragon — sold
out soon after the post office doors opened.Shortly after that, the controversy
began.
“When I saw this year’s dragon stamp, I was scared to death!” wrote
author Zhang Yihe on her Sina Weibo, China’s Twitter-like service.The dragon is
depicted with its fangs bearing and claws out, seemingly ready to pounce. Its
eyes are a dark abyss with only the littlest beads of white staring out at the
viewer.Chinese have a natural affinity towards dragons. The Chinese, the legend
goes, are thought to be the descendants of the dragon. While the Chinese
view the dragon as an auspicious and graceful creature, the West has
historically depicted dragons as threatening beasts. The stamp’s
designer Chen Shaohua said the fierce dragon he drew is supposed to represent a
confident China.Some critics fear the depiction may be sending the wrong
message: aggression instead of confidence.Over the past year China’s neighbors
like Vietnam and the Philippines along with the United States have bristled at
China’s more aggressive/confident strut on the geopolitical stage , especially
in its pursuit of increasing its naval power and the ongoing territorial
disputes in the South China Sea.Speaking to Hong Kong’s South China Morning
Post, Chen conceded that he had not “thought about foreigners’ perceptions of a
ferocious dragon and whether it represents a rising China,” but offered that
his fierce looking dragon would help block the “evil spirits of 2012.”This is
only the third time a dragon stamp has been released to commemorate the Lunar
New Year since 1949. Both in 1988 and 2000, the dragons were depicted in
more graceful and gentler poses.Chen, on his Weibo account, wrote that China
Post officials had asked him to adjust his design to make the dragon “gentler
and more modern.” Chen, who based his design on the dragon that used to
adorn the front of the Chinese emperor’s robes, stood his ground. The post
office officials ultimately relented and accepted his justifications.The
growing controversy appears to be a boon for stamp collectors, especially those
who got to the post office early to buy a set. The Associated Press
reportsthat one stamp reseller was reportedly selling a set of 20 for 178 yuan
($28) — much higher than the original face value of 24 yuan ($4).Dragon stamps
have proved to be especially valuable on the collector’s market. The 1988
version of the dragon stamp now fetches, for a single stamp, upwards of 10,000
yuan (a little more than $1,500).When asked if this year’s dragon stamp looked
scary, Ms. Feng from the Beijing post office said, “It looks fierce, but
since it’s the design of the one on the emperor’s robe, it actually looks more
majestic.”
The Year of the Dragon begins on 23 January
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