I was thinking about interviewing my colleague James Farrer about this recent conference held in Beijing on sexuality in China, but Devin beat me to the punch. This interview is jacked from Devin's excellent website on global policy innovations:
Read More人在中国现在能读我的博客!People in China can now read my blog!
Now that I am living in China, I am painfully aware of the fact that this website is blocked. Nothing to do with the site per se, just that all Squarespace websites are currently blocked in China. In order to get around this, I've set up a sister site where I will be posting all my blogs. I will continue to use this site as it has already developed a readership, but will not be posting photos for a while, at least not in the blogs, since it is incredibly time consuming to do so.
My sister site is: http://www.myspace.cn/shanghaidrew
People who are linking to my site in China may wish to alert readers of this new site.
Cheers!
Andrew
Beijing or Bust: Documenting China's "Returnees"
My review of a doc film on overseas Chinese living in Beijing
Read MoreTrippin’ at the Hip-Hoppinest Club in Beijing: Propaganda
Description of a night at the popular hip-hop club in Wudaokou, Beijing, called Propaganda
Read MoreFreedom, Beijing Style
One of my projects while in Beijing is to research and experience the city’s notorious “underground” live music scene. The scene is not that underground really--for several years now clubs have been operating in the open, featuring gritty Chinese rock bands. One such club is 2Kolegas, which opened up two years ago. Run by veteran rocker Liu Miao 刘淼 and his partner , the club is located beyond the Third Ring Road on Liangmaqiao Street. It’s in a Drive-in Movie Theater Park. The area of its location is parkland--meaning field and forest. The club itself is small, and patrons can sit outside on a dirt-grass field and drink their beers while enjoying the (cough, splutter) clear Beijing night air.
Read MoreMuse: Shanghai's Toniest Nightclub?
If you want to see a slice of the Shanghai high life, go to Muse on a Friday night.
Read MoreA Stroll through the Shanghai Night
Last night a dinner engagement with an old friend fell through and my wife had her own dinner plans with former colleagues, leaving me in the city center with two hours of empty time--a precious commodity in Shanghai. I decided to take advantage of the opportunity to reacquaint myself with the Shanghai nightscape. From Xintiandi 新天地, where my wife and I had gone to have a cup of coffee, I strolled into the darkening evening, heading Bundward.
Read MoreAll of Shanghai Under one Roof
One of the highlights of my week was seeing the play “Under a Shanghai Roof” 上海屋檐下, written by the famous playwright Xia Yan 夏衍 (1900-1995). Xia Yan, ne Shen 沈乃熙, was born in the Zhejiang city of Hangzhou. He took part in the May Fourth demonstrations in 1919 and traveled to Japan in 1920 to study, where like so many other young idealistic Chinese students, he was introduced to Marxist theory. He joined the Guomindang in 1924 and after the “failed revolution” of 1927 he entered the Communist Party.
Read MoreShanghai: A Day in the Life
I read the news today oh boy…wait, I didn’t have to read the news, because I’m here. In China, at last! After several months of beta testing, this site finally goes LIVE. Yes, folks, I’ll be here for the next several months, your roving reporter of the CHINA SCENE. Though I’ll be busy the next few months, especially after the Dartmouth FSP program kicks off this September, I fully intend to keep posting my impressions and reflections on what’s going down in the P R of C as it revs up for the OLYMPICS.
Read MoreBattle of the Sexes: Shanghai Baby vs. Foreign Babes in Beijing
It recently came to my attention that Wei Hui's novel Shanghai Baby has been made into a film, starring Bai Ling as "Coco", the novel's protagonist. Meanwhile, Rachel Dewoskin has turned her own non-fictional account of her stint as an actress in a 1990s popular Chinese TV series, Foreign Babes in Beijing into a film as well. Interesting that both stories are being produced as films around the same time and that they both deal with female sexuality in China during the same era. In one, Chinese women appear seductive, Western men are virile while Chinese men are weak. In the other, Western women are attracted to virile, artsy Chinese men. What a telling juxtaposition! I'll get back to this theme at the end of this blog, but first, for those of you unfamiliar, here's a rundown of both stories.
Read MoreA Dialogue on Fairer Globalization with Devin Stewart
Public Manners in China and the Case of a Korean Blogger
China and Genocide in Darfur vs. America in Iraq
Sustainable Development and the "Eco-City" of Dongtan near Shanghai
Wired Magazine has published a feature article on the planned eco-community of Dongtan. Dongtan is under development on the eastern edge of Chongming Island, a large island at the mouth of the Yangzi River near Shanghai. It is an experiment in urban sustainability financed by the Shanghai Industrial Investment Corporation and designed by the European firm Arup.
Read MoreResponsible Globalization in Asia and the World
Strange Cities: A Multimedia Site on Old Shanghai
Three years ago, while researching the history of jazz music in Shanghai, I discovered that one of Shanghai's most famous bandleaders from the 1930s, a White Russian named Serge Ermoll, had migrated with his family to Sydney. It turns out that his son, also named Serge, is a very accomplished jazz pianist and quite well known here in the jazz community. His granddaughter, Tatiana Pentes, has taken her family history and constructed a wonderful multimedia website incorporating some of her own original collection of photos and documents from her grandparents.
Read MoreAn Interview with Peter Hessler
David Spindler and the Great Wall
This week, tens of thousands of people will be reading Peter Hessler's New Yorkerarticle on David Spindler and his Great Wall project. Here I offer a brief testament in support of David's work.
Read MoreThe Great Wall of China: Article and Film
For several years now, a former classmate of mine from Dartmouth College named David Spindler ('89) has been conducting fieldwork and scholarly research on the history of the Great Wall. Specifically, his interest is in the walls built in the areas north of Beijing during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) in order to protect the capital from Mongol raids.
Read MoreFinal Remarks on the Usage and Abusage of "Laowai"
It appears that the H-ASIA thread on "laowai" may be finally drawing to a close (I may be speaking too soon--Ryan may still be holding a few posts in his mailbox). As one of the editors of this list, and also as the person who inadvertently started this conversation by using the term in an unrelated discussion, I thought it might be a good idea to summarize the gist of the conversation we've had. Basically, the discussion has revolved around the meaning and usage of the term "laowai" in China today.
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