The “Chinese Dream” is one of the most important political and cultural slogans in 21st-century China. It was heavily promoted by President Xi Jinping shortly after he took office in 2012, and it now permeates public life. The concept is deeply rooted in the idea of 中华民族伟大复兴 (Zhōnghuá Mínzú Wěidà Fùxīng), or “the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.” This addresses the historical narrative of the “Century of Humiliation” (roughly 1839-1949), a period when China suffered from foreign invasions and internal turmoil. The Chinese Dream, therefore, is a powerful call to restore China to what is seen as its rightful place as a leading global power. Comparison to the “American Dream”: A common mistake is to see the “Chinese Dream” as a simple equivalent of the “American Dream.” The two are fundamentally different:
The core value underpinning the Chinese Dream is a form of state-guided patriotism where personal and national destinies are presented as one and the same.
The term 中国梦 is formal and has a strong official tone.