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Danwei Picks
A Shanghai baby talks about old ChinaPosted by Joel Martinsen, April 30, 2008 5:14 PM
Danwei Picks is a daily digest of the "From the Web" links found on the Danwei homepage. A feed for the links as they are posted throughout the day is available at Feedsky (in China) or Feedburner (outside China). Republished old books illuminate China: Graham Earnshaw talks to the Shanghai Daily about his series of republished books about China in the old days: Another Shanghai book is The Unexpurgated Diary of a Shanghai Baby by Elsie McCormick, a humorous little book that was first published in 1923.
The nationalistic Global Times has published an abridged translation of the piece with the title The West has hurt the feelings of Chinese students.
Now the China Daily reports that the city has been spurred into action: More than 1,000 children, aged between 9 and 16 from poor families in Liangshan, Sichuan province, have been lured to Dongguan, Shenzhen and Huizhou in the Pearl River Delta area, to work as cheap labor in factories, Southern Metropolis Daily reported. The Southern Metropolis Daily is here (in Chinese).
But Beijing may be doubting its backfiring tactics, and secretly shameful of some of its own citizens' behaviour. (You know something is up when you see Chinese guards cracking down on pro-China protests; or when even Communist Party members writing for Mainland newspapers are getting death threats for being too "moderate" towards foreigners.) In the past, when it looked like it was all going wrong, Beijing would call out the tanks. But that iron fist thing is so Soviet-era 20th century. Now, they bring in the PR flacks.
China has always been highly decentralized in its power, owing greatly to its enormousness. Yet at a more fundamental level, placing the blame on local officials absolves the central government of much of its responsibility. While it’s true that Beijing does not want rogue local officials terrorizing Chinese citizens, it also has shown little desire to step into disputes unless absolutely forced. In other words, it wants things to be better, it just has little interest in facilitating certain types of change.
French luxury-goods group LVMH has decided to postpone a vintage car rally that it was due to organise in China at the end of May, a company spokesman told Agence France-Presse.
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Tales of Old Hong Kong: The new Tales of Old Hong Kong compiled by Derek Sandhaus is available at Earnshaw Books.
Diamond Hill by Feng Chi-shun: Feng's memoir Diamond Hill describes an era of gambling and gangsters, Suzie Wong and squatter villages, fires and food stalls, and the Kowloon Walled City and its white powder. "A time when people were poor, but life was rich," he says. The world that he grew up in no longer exists, but his book - the first ever on the Diamond Hill refugee settlement, in either Chinese or English - offers a candid picture of what life was like for most Hong Kong residents in the 1950s.
William A. Callahan's China: The Pessoptimist Nation: China: The Pessoptimist Nation shows how the heart of Chinese foreign policy is not a security dilemma, but an identity dilemma. Through a careful analysis of how Chinese people understand their new place in the world, the book charts how Chinese identity emerges through the interplay of positive and negative feelings in a dynamic that intertwines China's domestic and international politics.
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+ People: Chen Daming, director (2004.06): Chen's own life story could be rich material for a feature film. After being rusticated from the Henan Opera School, he was forced to move away from Kaifeng to look for work. The Film Academy is the most prestigious film school in China, counting the directors Zhang Yimou and Chen Kaige among its alumni, and competition for place to study there is fierce. Chen Daming came to Beijing for an audition, and was accepted after three auditions. + Mo Luo: Turning enemies into people (2009.06): Mo Luo, an essayist and poet, writes about dehumanizing the enemy. + Skirting the law in China's private enterprise reform (2006.05): An essay by Wu Xiaobo (吴晓波), 'Reform Begins with Transgression' (改革从违法开始), about how early Chinese private enterprise dealt with a vague legal framework.
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Comments on A Shanghai baby talks about old China
What really got to me in the NY Times article was the comment from the Tibetan student who essentially stated that he was to terrified (especially for his family) to attend these 'discussions' and 'debates' held on campus for fear that his photo could be taken, among other things.
I'm not one to use labels such as "thugs" and "goons" to describe a population, but I think it is an apt description for those engaging in intimidation at institutes of higher learning...places that should be havens offor honest, open and safe debate and discussion.
Very, very sad to hear.
It's definitely sad that he wasn't able to speak up for fear of intimidation.
But to be honest a lot of the pro-Tibet crowd - perhaps many passionate activists in general - use similar irrational tactics as those mentioned in the article. ie. shouting their opposition down, quoting statistics and facts out of context, violence etc.