Being Chinese | I put myself on the Shanghai marriage market. It wasn’t pretty
People’s Square is a ruthlessly efficient analogue of Tinder, run by elderly Chinese parents. I quickly learned about my own limits

China greeted me with a shrug. On Tinder and Baihe in Hong Kong, Shenzhen and Shanghai, a 40-something woman doing dozens of free swipes a day netted two to three matches a week. Hong Kong said hello, then ghosted. Shenzhen tried to sell me a pyramid scheme involving hair transplants and bee pollen for men and women of all ages.
Shanghai, though, came with a wingwoman. G, a no-nonsense East German at the conservatory where I was on research leave, pushed me into Friday tango lessons on the ninth floor of an inner-city office building that had sprung parquet flooring and was all very earnestly renovated. The Shanghainese instructor, a severe taskmistress with a bloodhound’s nose for fakes, clocked my synthetic felt-bottomed heels (I swear I was conducting fieldwork for a dance anthropology project). Everyone else refused to swap partners. I left with a sprained ankle and a compendium of stern glares.
So, on to the infamous weekend marriage market at People’s Square. G, a formidable matriarch fluent in love, duty and European bakeries in Shanghai, encouraged me with a mock-imperial flourish: “Go forth in the name of anthropology, discover and conquer.”
The park is a prehistoric but ruthlessly efficient analogue of Tinder, run by parents with umbrellas. Elderly Chinese mothers and fathers tape their children’s vital stats to rain gear: gender, age, height, salary, square footage of the apartment already secured in a first-tier city, in that order.
