Roll with it

来源 :汉语世界(The World of Chinese) | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:xiaozhi_1100
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  It’s a sight that’s as quintessentially “Beijing” as a tea-swilling taxi driver or pensioner walking his caged bird: The middle-aged man going about his business with a pair of walnuts (or string of Buddhist prayer beads) in the palm of one hand.
  Not too different from the millennial who can’t let go of their mobile phone, older Chinese love their wenwan (文玩, “ornamental objects”). They may be walnuts, beads, balls, or fidget spinners, but wenwan do serve a purpose other than just giving restless hands something to play with.
  Dating back to at least the Han dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE), palming (盘, p1n, rolling) nuts was an exercise believed to benefit its practitioners by stimulating the hand’s acupuncture points, improving blood flow, and even imparting spiritual satisfaction. When a wenwan lover gets stuck into a new pair of walnuts, part of the pleasure comes from knowing that its raw and coarsely wrinkled features will, with time, become rich and smooth, developing a dusky color and luminous sheen from years of rolling, cleaning, and oiling.
  Last September, Dragon TV’s crosstalk show Wenwan catapulted the practice and jargon of pan to a younger, wider audience. The skit featured a wenwan aficionado, played by comedian Meng Hetan, trying to expand his nut-rubbing repertoire to a variety of coarse-looking objects, including a root sculpture, a Shoushan stone carving, and even a Shar Pei dog, exclaiming, “[If it’s] dry and rough instead of round and smooth, roll it!” (干干巴巴的,麻麻赖赖的,一点儿都不圆润,盘它!G`ngan b`ba de, m1ma l3ilai de, y#di2nr d4u b& yu1nr&n, p1n t`!)
  Then in January, a Douyin video titled “Pan anything—pan settles all” began to go viral, and soon hundreds of thousands of users began sharing photos and videos of themselves rotating whatever they could (literally) get their hands on: oranges, pitayas, cats, lipstick, even cacti and hedgehogs.
  Soon, pan became an all-purpose verb. Initially, it was used to express love or fondness. Li Xueqin, a grassroots Douyin celebrity, replied to a message from her idol Kris Wu, proclaiming “I want to pan you.” (我想盘你。W6 xi2ng p1n n@.) Meanwhile, between lovers, “[I’ll] pan you a lifetime” (盘你一辈子 P1n n@ y!b-izi) is almost the equivalent of a marital vow.
  Other actions were later added: buy, sell, love, hate, win, lose, do or don’t. “I’ve always wanted a YSL lipstick; [I’ll] buy one!” (我一直想要一支YSL口红,盘它! W6 y#zh! xi2ng y3o y# zh~ YSL k6uh5ng, p1n t`!) a hard-up college student may exclaim on payday. “Tonight, the China Men’s National Football Team plays the Thai team. Pan them!” (国足今晚要对战泰国队,给我盘他!Gu5z% j~nw2n y3o du#zh3n T3igu5du#, g0i w6 p1n t`!) a Chinese fan wrote before March’s AFC Asian Cup.
  However, when the team lost in a humiliating 0-1 result, “Pan it!” cried furious fans, possibly indicating what they wish they could do to the national team. Too much disappointment like this, and someone might exclaim, “I’ve been pan’ed by life!” (我被生活盤了。W6 b-i sh8nghu5 p1n le.)
  It’s not clear how this expression got on such a roll, but Meng’s performance suggests that the habit is all about removing edges to make things more comfortable or controllable. In other words: Whether you love or hate something, just roll with it.
其他文献
“SOLID HAMMER” USUALLY REFERS TO A PHOTOGRAPH, VOICE CHAT, SCREENSHOT, OR VIDEO THAT CONFIRMS  CELEBRITY RUMORS  Celebrity gossip is bread and water to internet users everywhere: From dating to births
期刊
Armed with stolen data and social psychology, a new breed of sophisticated swindlers is targeting unwary WeChat users  信息泄露和“熟人心理”給了社交媒体诈骗  可乘之机,用户只能更加谨慎  When 50-year-old Jiang Huimin received a mess
期刊
Inthe summer of 2014, I did not die at Blue Lake Manor.  Yes, this was in Denmark, but it had no connection with Copenhagen. The location of this writing center in the western forests relative to the
期刊
China’s most ubiquitous snack is going high-end.  When Midnight Diner, a widely panned Chinese adaptation of the Japanese drama of the same name, premiered in 2017, the characters’ habit of going to a
期刊
China’s anti-mafia campaign has local government enthusiasm running amok.  Doctors are one of China’s most “black-hearted” professions, at least according to the government of Weitang county in Jiangs
期刊
Fraudsters are exploiting bureaucratic inertia over ID fraud.  For nearly four years, a man wanted for murdering his mother evaded police with a series of false identities. The capture of 24-year-old
期刊
China’s metro technology goes global with Ethiopia’s first light rail network  中國高铁技术走进埃塞俄比亚,为东非地区带去了第一条城市轻轨  When Shenzhen Metro employee Gao Junzhang first arrived in Addis-Ababa four years ago, the
期刊
On a 44-meter mural in Singapore’s Central Business District, artist Yip Yew Chong unfurls over 150 years of Chinese migration. The mural spans the entire back wall of the historic Thian Hock Keng Tem
期刊
Why do consumers throw tantrums to defend their rights?  It’s not unusual to buy a car, only to find some defect afterwards. Yet a Mercedes-Benz customer surnamed Wang won the public’s sympathy and th
期刊
1.  The three of us ambled in the cold wind by the river, circling this unfinished residential complex.  Our minds were still in a trance, I knew that; we might all have known that. We talked aimlessl
期刊