Category Archives: Global Chinese Culture

Ne Zha: From Ancient Myth to Global Animated Hero

He was born with magical and extraordinary talents. He was renowned for defying fate and formidable foes. He, whose name is Ne Zha, began as an ancient myth and has now become a modern hero.

Ne Zha’s Beginning

A well-known Chinese novel called The Investiture of Gods (封神演义), from the 16th Century, that was based on ancient tales, is where Ne Zha’s story originates. In the mythology text, they stated that Ne Zha was actually born to military commander Li Jing (李靖) following an extraordinarily lengthy three-year pregnancy. In modern versions, rather than being born normally, Ne Zha was born from a lotus blossom and was already very powerful.

An image of Ne Zha in Fengshen Yangyi

Ne Zha had a reputation for being a mischievous and defiant child. He opposed the Gods, engaged in many battles, and disobeyed authority. In the original tale, despite these traits, Ne Zha ultimately sacrifices himself to protect his family and people.

Ne Zha’s Powers & Cultural Symbolism

Ne Zha wielded the powers of fire and fought with many weapons. He rides on his flaming wheels, carries a cosmic ring and a fire-tipped spear.

  • Rebellion/Defiance: Ne Zha often defied the gods, dragons, and fate itself. This symbolizes the struggle between societal standards versus personal opinions. Oftentimes, Ne Zha symbolizes challenging injustice.
  • Filial Piety/Courage: Ne Zha sacrifices himself to save his family and people after an incident with the Dragon King. This symbolizes the culture of loyalty and moral duty to protect loved ones.
  • Transformation/Rebirth: Ne Zha is reborn again from a lotus after his self-sacrifice. This symbolizes the idea that even after tragic events, one can return stronger and wiser.

Ne Zha’s story has a blend of Taoism and Buddhism. Some Taoist elements contain the Lotus flower, and he had a Taoist mentor in the original story. Some Buddhist elements contain the ideology of karma, rebirth, and filial piety.

Modern Adaptation: Ne Zha (2019 Animated Film)

The 2019 animated film of Ne Zha is a modern retelling of this ancient myth. In contrast to conventional depictions, the movie portrays Ne Zha as a youngster who was born with the demon spirit, leading to chaos within the world. Similarly, Ne Zha defies social norms, embraces his own path rather than giving up to his destiny.

Ne Zha 2019 Animated Film Cover Photo

New Meanings

The 2019 animated film directed by Jiaozi reimagines Ne Zha’s character, emphasizing themes of self-determination, resilience, and identity. Unlike how in the traditional narrative, Ne Zha was born to be a heroic figure. This reinterpretation of Ne Zha was able to captivate and resonate with audiences worldwide due to its universal themes and storyline. At the time, it became the highest-grossing animated film in China, surpassing Zootopia by Disney and Coco. Now they’ve released Ne Zha 2, which has surpassed $2 billion in worldwide revenue.

2019 Film Ne Zha’s Themes

  1. Challenging Fate & Authority: Ne Zha struggles against the “curse” of being born with the demon spirit, which everyone deems will be his destiny. However, this film encourages asserting your own path and critiques prejudice and societal expectations. 
  2. Individuality versus Social Pressure: Ne Zha faces prejudice from villagers and elders because he has a demonic origin. This mirrors the original story’s tension between filial piety, societal duty, and personal will but reframed as a modern struggle for identity and acceptance from society. 
  3. Moral Lessons & Redemption: Ne ZHa’s journey focuses a lot on resilience and self-determination. Similar to the original storyline, in the 2019 film, Ne Zha dies and is given a chance to receive new physical bodies through the lotus. The ties into the Buddhist idea of purification, karma, and personal enlightenment. 
  4. Symbolic Authority Figures: Ne Zha’s battles, though, are physical; they also symbolize standing up against injustice and societal pressures, redefining how the original myths critique of rules that misuse power.

Conclusion

With its contemporary retelling of an old Chinese tale, the 2019 animated feature Ne Zha emphasizes themes of resilience, identity, and self-determination. The film offers a new take on classic stories by recreating Nezha’s persona and journey, making them applicable to modern audiences. Its widespread popularity demonstrates how universally appealing tales are that delve into identity and societal pressures.

The Transformations of the White Snake and Her Tale

Everyone has that one friend who falls for someone that everyone told them they shouldn’t be with. Someone that is going to cheat on them, mistreat them, or otherwise is just flat out wrong for them, but the friend always has a way of shrugging it off. If you have a friend like that then they might resonate with the legend of the White Snake. It’s one of China’s oldest and most famous love stories. It features love, betrayal, morality, and spiritual insight.

Depiction of the White Snake in spirit form
Depiction of the White Snake in spirit form. Source: Chinese Mythology Wold Wide

The Tale’s plot

Over the centuries this tale has morphed almost as much as the stories protagonist. It has taken on new meanings and messages to reflect the anxieties and culture of the times. At first the tale encapsulated a few paragraphs of essentially a warning about the dangers of women on high ranking officials and the distraction they can play from their more important duties, no where near a complex love story with intricate and nuanced details. However this was a real anxiety of the time with stories like Yáng Yùhuán’s where a beautiful woman essentially put an empire into turmoil because of a distracted emperor. But, as the times changed so did the tale. In modern renditions the tale is a lot more nuanced and complicated, but it essentially takes on the following plot.

The modern versions of the tale have a much more complex, intricate, and meaningful story than the original. They includes love, betrayal, heart break, and more. They reflect a lot of the anxieties we have today about if we are with the right person, the fear of “others” and acceptance of the marginalized, social norms and the fear of crossing them, and many more.

Above are 2 depictions of the White Snake legend. On the left an illustration from Stories to Caution the World (1624). On the right a modern Hubei Han opera.

The Movie

The 2019 animated film White Snake, by Light Chaser Animation re-imagines this classic legend with a Pixar like animation style. It has elements of fantasy, romantic drama, and traditional Chinese culture. On its surface the movie is a cheesy, predictable kids’ movie with talking dogs and a PG rating but its much richer than that. It explores identity, memory, and much more.

Analysis

Instead of focusing on the tragic romance of the White Snake and Xu Xian, it instead focuses on a mission to retrieve the White Snake’s lost memories, and understand her true identity while facing outside threats who want to exploit her. In a lot of ways this refocusing on finding the White Snakes true identity encapsulates the identity crisis many Chinese people face today.

In China there is a identity crisis between tradition and modernity. Preserving ancient values vs embracing a new world. Reconciling your past with your present situation, and understanding who you are. In the movie, Blanca has to reconcile her memories of her self with the new version of herself that wants to connect with humans. These two versions of herself come to a conflict when her sister the Green Snake tells her that Blanca can’t live safely with humans. Rather than rejecting a single version of herself, Blanca integrates the two identities of herself into one and embraces her dual nature. She uses her powers to protect humans and her sister. This gives guidance to Chinese people that your true identity is not one of modern China or historic China, but of both. You are a product of your past and present and these don’t have to conflict, they can both influence you and develop you into a more intricate and complex person.

The film chooses a Pixar like aesthetic with beautiful CGI, and more global visual signage of good vs evil with light colors on heros and dark auras around villans. This allows the story to transcend language barriers with a wider audience. This is the goal in it being a global retelling but it has some trade-offs. In the original telling of the story there is more moral complexity with a central conflict being of the morality of spirits and humans intermingling, represented by Fahai. However in this movie the materialistic general provides a much less nuanced moral dilemma, the audience does not feel conflicted on if he is doing the right thing.

Conclusion

The legend of the White Snake has stayed popular for so long because it evolves along with time, just like its protagonist. What began as a simple moral warning about temptation has transformed into a deeply emotional story about identity, love, and the struggle between worlds. The 2019 White Snake film captures this transformation beautifully, translating ancient anxieties about order and transgression into modern questions of identity and belonging. In adopting a global visual language, it opens the story to a broader audience while still preserving its emotional and cultural roots.

Ultimately, whether read as a myth, a romance, or a reflection of modern China, White Snake remains a story about the courage to embrace one’s full self, even when that self defies the rules of the world around you.

LEGO Monkie King: A reimagination of familiar characters

Introduction

The epic Journey to The West has been retold and built upon in innumerable ways since its inception in the 16th century. Especially in the modern day, as our values continue to evolve, it becomes imperative to evaluate the modern adaptations that build upon the dense layers of the characters. One, perhaps surprising place from which we can see this is through the children’s TV show Lego Monkie Kid. This TV show envisions the well-known characters in somewhat of a new light allowing for a subversion of the viewer’s expectations. While many aspects change in this adaptation, one of the most interesting changes occurs to Macaque, or Sun Wukong’s doppelganger. Despite being villainous in both works, his arc and motivations differ between the two adaptations.

Popular novel version of Journey to the West

Journey to the West

In the original Journey to the West, the Monkey King (Sun Wukong) is born out of a cosmic stone. As he grows with age and power, the rash and arrogant Sun Wukong becomes obsessed with cheating death. He fears his own mortality so much that he wreaks havoc in the underworld, attempting to remove his name from the register of life and death. He continues to wreak havoc in the heavens until the Jade emperor sends one hundred thousand soldiers after him. Sun Wukong is able to defeat them but eventually his luck runs out. The Buddha traps him the Monkey King under a mountain, imprisoning him for his sins. After five hundred years of imprisonment, the Buddha awakens him to send him on a pilgrimage across China to retrieve holy buddhist scriptures. Along with Tang Xuangzang and Pigsy, he undergoes trials and tribulations including foiling his doppelganger’s (Macaque) mischievous activities. He is forced to kill his doppelganger at the end of chapter fifty-eight with the help of the Buddha. Overcoming this trial allows the journey to finish and becomes a massive symbolic victory for Sun Wukong. 

Popular Movie adaptation of fight between doppelganger and Sun Wukong

Lego Monkie King

The TV Show Lego Monkie Kid picks up in the distant future that resembles our civilization in some ways. The fantastical characters like Pigsy still remain but in a new and refreshing way. The protagonist, Monkie Kid (MK), is a noodle delivery boy who accidentally acquires Sun Wukong’s powers by holding his staff. Sun Wukong then chooses him as his successor to fight off evil. The rest of the show involves MK fighting off familiar foes from Journey to the West to protect the city. With each episode dealing with different villains and an overarching season theme, the narrative structure is vastly different from the original source material. This allows for new ways to explore the characters. 

Sun Wukong (Right) and Macaque (left) fighting. Macaque is not pictured exactly as a doppelganger in this but rather as a more sinister-looking version. Despite this appearance, he oftentimes helps MK and tries to save others allowing for him to be redeemed.

Symbolism and Comparison of characters

In the modern adaptation, lots of inspiration is taken from the symbolism of Sun Wukong’s journey. The protagonist MK is a very similar character to Sun Wukong. He is arrogant and often naive about the smartest ways to solve problems. However, his moral compass is much more intact than Sun Wukong’s was. Monkie King differs from Sun Wukong in that he does not cause unnecessary havoc and is not motivated by selfish desires such as immortality. He, under the Monkey King’s guidance, protects the city from demons. His character arc throughout the seasons is akin to a modern fighter protagonist as he has to learn new moves to defeat new villains. However, one of the largest departures from the original source material includes the new representation of Macaque, the doppelganger. In the original Journey to the West, Macaque fights with Sun Wukong confusing Tang Xuangzang and Pigsy. However, Sun Wukong, with the help of Buddha, eventually helps him defeat his doppelganger. This fight symbolizes the moral triumph of Monkey over his evil side. Macaque represents the Monkey King’s double-mindedness and his defeat at the hands of the Monkey King. The fight also shows the illusion of identity. Neither Tang Xuangzing nor Pigsy can differentiate between the two monkeys. In order to understand one’s true identity, ultimate enlightenment or realization is required. However, the show picks up later and views the character in a different light. For one, it is revealed early on that Macaque had survived the fight but was badly wounded. This leads him to resent Sun Wukong and MK, by extension. This resentment leads to conflict between MK and Macaque as Macaque fears MK becoming like Sun Wukong and severely injuring him again. This adaptation also gives more depth to Macaque’s character. Despite being an “evil version” of Sun Wukong, he is able to be redeemed as a character, just as Sun Wukong was. In this case, he no longer represents the duality of Sun Wukong, but rather becomes his own character. Even despite knowing the power MK could hold, and the pain he could inflict, Macaque still goes out of his way to protect him because he knows that MK is the only one that can protect them from their existential threats.

Macaque scenes from the show

Conclusion

The TV show Lego Monkie Kid builds upon the original legend of Journey to the West. However, it also puts new spins on characters such as the protagonist, MK and the doppelganger, Macaque. While the source material used Macaque as symbolism for Sun Wukong’s duality, the show uses Macaque as a redeemable character who overcomes his resentment for Sun Wukong to ultimately do the right thing to save the city. 

Journey to Seoul: The Monkey King’s Evolution in The God of High School

There are very few characters in world literature that travel as far, and morph as fluidly, as Sun Wukong, the Monkey King. He begins not as a god or a man, but as a miracle of nature: a monkey born from a magical stone upon the Flower-Fruit Mountain. Endowed with great strength, intelligence, an d in explicable thirst for power, Monkey learns under a Taoist immortal, masters seventy-two different transformations, and gains control of the Ruyi Jingu Bang, an iron stave that can shrink to the size of a pin or expand to the size of a spear that can pierce the heavens.

Drunk on his own strength, he wages war on the celestial realm, defeats the heavenly generals, and declares himself “Great Sage Equal to Heaven.” He devours the Peaches of Immortality, empties the Elixir of Life, and laughed a t Ja de Emperor. The gods, powerless to stop him, beg Buddha for help. When Sun Wukong brags to Buddha that he can leap out of Buddha’s own palm, he discovers too late that he has been tricked, based on that hubris, Buddha contains him in a mountain, trapping him there for five hundred years to stew in his own bitterness and rage.

Sun Wukong is freed by the Buddhist monk named Tripitaka, as long as he agrees to join the monk on a pilgrimage to India and recover sacred scriptures. In order to control the unruly Monkey, Tripitaka puts a magical hot tightening headband on him that constricts painfully around his head each time he indulges his rebellious impulses. Thus begins their dangerous journey west, along with Pigsy and Sandy, during which Sun Wukong fights off demons, spirits, and his own violent urges to protect his master. Journey to the West is not simply an adventure story; it is a story of transformation; it is a moral allegory about Sun Wukong’s transformation from rebellion to redemption. However, beneath the willful restraint of the disciplined Wukong, there is uncontrollable, restless, untamable energy. He is still a creature that questions every hierarchy, mocks every kind of law, and overthrows what power represents.

The God of High School: A Global Stage for Myths

The God of High School, from Korean artist Yongje Park, begins as a high-school martial-arts tournament, but eventually unravels an epic cosmology in which contestants use the powers of gods and mythological figures. The happy-go-lucky but impulsive protagonist, Jin Mori, is more than he seems: he is the legendary Sun Wukong, the Monkey King. The anime adaptation produced by MAPPA Studios, which is streaming and distributed worldwide on Crunchyroll, is teeming with cultural symbols across cultures. It has an embodiment of one Chinese myth told by a Korean author, animated in Japan, and streamed worldwide, it is a narrative of cultural migration in action.

While Mori has retained the same irrepressible spirit as Wukong, his rebellion is now constructed from a multicultural blend: he is grounded in Chinese myth, enriched with is Korean narrative, animated with Japanese anime tropes, and celebrated among a global audience with is pop cultural popularity.

Plotline: From High School Tournament to Mythic Quest

The God of High School starts off with a rather simple setup, a martial arts tournament for high school students across South Korea; but, underneath that apparent surface, the story emulates the classic journey of Sun Wukong and shifts the narrative of divine rebellion into a contemporary globalized format. At first, the protagonist Jin Mori is a somewhat arrogant and irreverent youth, who perplexes his opponents with his extraordinary martial prowess. The chaotic energy that Jin emits an apparent ignorance of consequences, quick improvisation, and never ending wit, all of which mirror the legendary antics of Wukong in the classic, from mocking celestial generals to besting exceptionally powerful giants. As the narrative develops, he succumbs to hints of his actual identity: Jin is are creation of the Monkey King and his mythical powers are purposely hidden to conveniently exist in a mortal world.

Mori meets fighters throughout the tournament who go beyond the typical fighter role into carriers of various mythologies. Some refer to Taoist immortals; some refer to Buddhist legacies; others Japanese folktales. In each fight, Mori’s creativity, stubborn bravery and playful rebellion extends Wukong’s legacy of contentious cooperation, applying a centuries-old motif to a contemporary act. Whereas Wukong fought heaven itself, Mori squares off against contemporary “deities” to confront dishonest organizers, conspiratorial elites, and Bōrei spirits, but the motif remains similar despite cultural changes, figurations of embodied liberty versus distorted hierarchy remain part of the tension in their relationship.

Mori is not only confronted by enemies attempting to divide his divine nature against his humanity, he received support from others like Tripitaka as well, imitating Tripitaka’s purported role in assisting Wukong’s transformation to normative discipline. Just like Wukong’s pilgrimage was a test of his commitment to obedience and concern for others, Mori’s pilgrimage is testing his fidelity to friendship, morality, and self-restraint against excessive powers, even when chaos tempts him. He finds himself contending with several frames of combat which represent a metaphorical pilgrimage: a negotiation between mischievousness and responsibility, harshness and compassion.

This parallel is made emphatically clear at the climax of the film. Mori entirely inhabits the Monkey King role, demonstrating incredible skill with his staff (wielded as a weapon or symbol of magic) while striking a balance with his human relationships. The narrative affirms the perennial lesson of Journey to the West: rebellion only has meaning if it is grounded within some ethical framework. Therefore, Mori extends Sun Wukong’s rebellion to a wider audience as part of his reframing of Sun Wukong’s escape for a global context, to be energetic and playful while also being clearly grounded in a set of values for a multicultural world.

From Stone Ape to Martial Artist: Transformation and Continuity

AspectSun Wukong (Journey to the West)Jin Mori (The God of High School)
OriginBorn from stone on Flower-Fruit MountainHuman form concealing divine identity
MentorTrained by Taoist immortalSelf-trained fighter learning empathy
WeaponRuyi Jingu Bang – magical iron staffSame staff, reimagined as glowing anime weapon
PersonalityRebellious, witty, chaotic goodEnergetic, idealistic, humorously stubborn
EnemiesCelestial bureaucracy, Buddha’s orderCorrupt gods and authoritarian systems

Mori preserves Sun Wukong’s moral ambiguity: part savior, part anarchist. Both characters utilize humor as a weapon, laughing in the face of authority.

However, their confrontations unfold in different contexts. In Journey to the West, Wukong’s rebellion is a spiritual rebellion: challenging divine hierarchy to achieve enlightenment. In The God of High School, rebellion is expressed socially and generationally in contemporary efforts for self-definition.

Visually, both anime embodies Wukong’s mythic energy. Mori’s golden aura and rapid pace function to conjure a Buddhist transcendence motif and the glowing staff paired with urban spaces translates a heavenly chaos to demonstrate a contemporary visual language.

Cultural Evolution – From Classic Text to Digital Myth

The evolution of Sun Wukong from a Novelist’s work in the Ming era to a character in modern date anime shows us how globalization works to rework myth. It is not an export of mythology, but a work of “translation through transformation.” The God of High School takes the Chinese heroic story and reframes it through Korean narrative rhythms and global anime aesthetics. One can see how myths evolve to live again.

Sun Wukong’s journey from a Ming-era novel to an anime expresses how myths travel and develop within and among cultures and even media. In The God of High School, the Monkey King does not just arrive in a new story. The Monkey King’s rebellion and irrepressibility are expressed through the merged narratives of multiple cultures, the foundational cultural story of Chinese myth, the narratives of Korean story, visuals with anime aesthetics that visually express his journey, and pop cultural conventions that allow the story to connect to a global audience.

The story also changes morally. Where the original story had the principle of spiritual redemption grounded in obedience to Tripitaka, the anime offers a perspective built on belief (conviction), friendship, and justice, while still preserving Wukong’s cheek and humor. This gives Mori the ability to also express the same spirit of rebellion that the original Monkey King expressed, but in a way that may be understood by a modern audience of youth, who are themselves grappling with complicated social and ethical landscapes.

The combination of these cultural components elevates Sun Wukong into a global archetype: a character whose spirit, wit, and moral ambiguity transcend boundaries of nation or history. Streaming services and webtoon adaptations bring Mori’s adventures to a global audience who may never experience the original text, making the Monkey King a modern symbol of textual and cultural freedom, moral courage, and playful rebellion against social and cultural conventions.

Through this weaving of cultures, The God of High School not only reanimates Wukong for a contemporary generation, but also demonstrates how myths endure: myths endure when they adapt to appeal to the aesthetics, ethics, and narratives of new audiences, and still preserve the frame of the character that has intrigued readers and viewers for centuries.

Black Myth: Wukong’s take on a Chinese Familiar Favorite

If you haven’t read the story yet: Journey to the West is a classic Chinese story about a monk’s pilgrimage guarded by the hero Sun Wukong (the Monkey King). Black Myth: Wukong is a retelling that turns those trials into an action RPG. You don’t play THE Wukong, but you’re a “Destined One” earning his mantle, boss by boss. I’ll show what the game keeps, what it changes, and what new meanings it creates.

Journey to the West follows the monk Tripitaka as he travels to India to retrieve Buddhist scriptures, protected by disciples like the Monkey King. Wukong starts as a rebellious trickster with huge power and 72 transformations, then gets tamed by a magic headband and ultimately attains Buddhahood after completing the pilgrimage. The novel brings together Buddhist/Daoist ideas with monster adventures and moral tests. Black Myth: Wukong is an ARPG that exploded globally, which launched in 2024. You play as the Destined One, a monkey with a staff on a path tied to Wukong. The main arc the game gives you is collecting six relics linked to Wukong’s six senses, which reframes the pilgrimage into a personal, Buddhist-like progression system.

What the game keeps from the classic

The game keeps its imagery and powers. The long staff, cloud-like mobility, and shapeshifting all carry over. Bosses and creatures come from the text’s demon collection, and the world leans hard into Chinese temples, mountain passes, and folk-religious symbols. (It’s basically Chinese myth in a triple-A game). It also keeps its episodic trial structure. The novel’s one trial after another becomes a bunch of boss arenas and zones. The soulslike game rhythm makes the moral/spiritual tests like literal skill checks—you learn a pattern, fail, adjust, and move forward. When I read Journey to the West, the tests in the story would funnily remind me of how I felt when fighting the bosses in the game.

What the game changes (on purpose)

You’re not exactly Wukong. Making the hero the Destined One (not the big guy himself) creates distance from the trickster and makes what I see as a zero to hero/ humbler arc. It’s a way to let players earn power without rewriting Wukong’s story.

From pilgrimage to perception: Making the search for six relics about the senses is a way to focus the story on the path to becoming enlightened. Instead of escorting Tripitaka west, you’re disciplining perception itself, sight, sound, etc. It’s kind of like the journey is internal. That’s a cool thematic point the novel seeds but the game makes a big component.

Tone shift: The novel has comedy and satire. But, the game goes somber and heavy. It takes from games like Elden Ring and Dark Souls (empty roads, mysterious NPCs) to make the game and stakes feel weighty.

New meanings that show up in play:

Failure becomes doctrine: In JTTW, backslides and scoldings (the headband!) discipline Wukong. In Black Myth, however, death-learn-retry is the law. The loop teaches patience and self-regulation. To me, basically a gamer’s version of cultivation.

Individual vs. collective: The book’s team (Wukong, Pigsy, Sandy, the monk) emphasizes interdependence. However, the game trims the party down and spotlights a lone striver. This creates a different take that keeps that single-player feel while still showing the master-disciple tradition in the background.

Global reach (and the noise around it)

The game broke records at launch, with almost ~2.2M CONCURRENT players on Steam in the first day! That is extremely good, especially for a single-player game. That made Wukong a mainstream entry point to JTTW for people who’d never heard of Tripitaka or Guanyin. It also became a talking point about triple-A (high-budget) games made in China, which is a space that is known to be dominated by Western/Japanese studios. Thus, making people more open and interested in Chinese culture and future games made by their studios.

My read on why this retelling works

I like that the game doesn’t just reenact the scenes chapter-by-chapter. Instead, it builds a playable scene out of JTTW’s ideas (discipline, illusion vs. insight, transformation) then lets you discover them at your own pace. Making us the Destined One also avoids the Wukong is OP (overpowered, because he’s immortal and extremely strong) problem and keeps growth meaningful. In other words, Journey to the West becomes less of a map and more like a lens. This can also spark curiosity in players to learn more about the JTTW and Chinese culture in general. Personally, I believe it’s essential for everyone’s growth and mutual understanding that we learn about and appreciate all cultures. I like that the game pushes that.