The Lao Xi Men 老西门 or Old West Gate area of Shanghai is full of homes, temples, and treasures dating back to the Qing Dynasty if not earlier. Recently, Tina Kanagaratnam and Katya Knyazeva co-wrote an article on the demolition of this area for SupChina. Katya is a real expert in this part of town and its history. I've been on her tour which she runs for Shanghai Flaneur. It was a while ago, but I remember we visited several homes that dated back to the Qing Dynasty.Since I'm on Christmas vacation now in Shanghai, between ferrying my daughters to their various appointments and engagements, I had a window of opportunity today to visit the area and see for myself what is going on there. I spent around two hours today plodding through the cold rain amongst a warren of alleyways and passages. I've been to this area before, many times over the past twenty years or so, but the impending destruction forced me to look at these alleys and homes with new eyes.
Read MoreSix Important Points About China Worth Remembering *
As a historian and these days an ethnographer/photographer/videographer/blogger of contemporary China, I pay a lot of attention to China’s portrayal in the western media. It is very interesting and telling to watch how China is constructed by western journalists and pundits. I find plenty to critique about western media portrayals of China and in the ways by which they are bandied about on social media sites like Facebook. And I think there are a few important facts to keep in mind any time we want to try to understand how China works. Here are six I have in mind:
Read MoreOh, That Magic Kingdom in the Middle Kingdom! Some Comparisons Between Shanghai Disneyland and LA Disneyland
Two years ago I visited the original Disneyland theme park in Anaheim California with my wife Mengxi and our two daughters Hannah and Sarah. This year on Christmas Day, we visited the new Disneyland theme park in our hometown of Shanghai. These two visits gave us the chance to compare and contrast the oldest and newest Disneylands. Here are some observations.
Read MoreOne Last Night Tour of the Bund (for now) and Saying Farewell to Astor House
Last night I led my final night tour of the Bund for the year 2017, and possibly the last tour involving the Astor House. As usual, my tour was organized by the Shanghai Flaneur company, which I highly recommend to people looking for a more substantial tour of the city's historic and contemporary cultures. The Astor House is rumored to be closing down for a major renovation after which it will become a museum for the Stock Exchange.
Read MoreThe Uncertain Future of the Astor House Hotel: A Historical Landmark Hotel in Shanghai
When I first visited Shanghai as a college student in 1988, I stayed at the Pujiang Hotel (浦江饭店) located just north of the Bund. Back then it was serving as a youth hostel. I remember sleeping in a large room with rows of beds filled with travelers from all over the world. Little did I know that I would be spending much of my adult life in this city researching its history. Perhaps my stay there kindled my desire to learn more about the social life that once romped in the hotel back in the 1920s. Perhaps the ghosts of famous residents from decades past whispered in my ear, begging me to preserve the memory of those glorious, decadent, daring, and dangerous times.
Read MoreJazzing the Bund: Joshua Redman and the Aaron Goldberg Trio at Jazz at Lincoln Center Shanghai
A review of a night at the new Jazz at Lincoln Center club near the Shanghai Bund
Read MoreMorphology, Longevity, Incept Dates: Random Musings, Memories, and Reflections Inspired by Blade Runner and the Sequel, Blade Runner 2049
While in Hong Kong yesterday, I had the golden opportunity to see Blade Runner 2049 directed by Denis Villeneuve, the long-awaited sequel to the original masterpiece directed by Ridley Scott, which came out in theaters back in 1982. The IFC Mall in central Hong Kong was the perfect place to see the sequel. In resonance with some major themes in the movie which I will discuss in this entry, one can look out from the rooftop garden of the mall upon a postcolonial futuristic Asian metropolis full of neon and desire, a tourist’s fantasy dreamworld that in reality is undergoing a major identity crisis as the local population transitions from one colonial master to another.
Read MoreKeeping your EARCOS to the Ground: Notes and Reflections on the 49th EARCOS Leadership Conference in Bangkok
The title of this entry is more than just my own poor attempt at a pun—it is meant to emphasize how the EARCOS conference grounds us in the practices, principles, and realities of governing over the complex entities of international schools, especially within the context of the world region that this conference seeks to represent.
Read MoreTen Reasons Why Cities are Grand (Especially Shanghai)
If I were asked to write down a list of the top ten reasons why I find cities so fascinating and such wonderful places to live, it would not be easy. Well, here I go anyway, and I'm sure at least some of these will be obvious to anybody who has lived in cities:
Read More逆流上水 Paddling Against the Current: On Rethinking Asian Language and Culture Studies and on Re-Orienting the Study Abroad Experience
This is a message especially for my American and European colleagues in Asian Studies and in the field of Study Abroad: The ways by which we learn Asian languages need to be rethought, and we also need to find better ways to enable more students to learn more Asian languages to study abroad in Asia. Here’s why.
Read MoreBustin’ Beijing: Subways, Schwarzman Scholars, and a Whole Lotta Breakdown in Sanlitun
I have a very special relationship with China’s capital city. I have lived there only twice for 6- month stints, once in 1996-7 and again in 2007. Yet I have a deep fondness for the city, and some of my oldest and dearest friends in China have lived or still live there. These days I manage to pay a visit to the city at least two or three times a year, for different purposes. Lately I’ve been going there to recruit university students for our DKU GLS program, which is what I was doing this past week. I visited the campus of Peking Foreign Languages University or Beiwai 北外 on Wednesday. On Thursday I gave a talk at Peking Normal University or Beishida 北师大. Today I headed out to Tianjin to talk to students at Nankai 南开 University (as I write this I’m on a high-speed train or gaotie back to Shanghai). In between these visits, I also managed to pay a visit to the Schwarzman Scholars campus at Tsinghua University, and also caught up with a few old friends.
Read MoreStill Taiwan After All These Years
My first study abroad experience at Dartmouth College was in Taipei, back in the summer of 1988. I remember the excitement of flying over there from Boston via Tokyo, and embarking on what would turn out to be a nine-month-long life-changing journey. It is therefore fitting that my last recruiting trip of this year was to Taiwan.
Read MoreBombay or Bust: My First Journey to India, and the Beginning of a Beautiful Friendship
A life-changing week in the other heart of Asian civilization
Read MoreBangkok Redux: Exploring the Golden City
A brief and intense sun-filled tour of the temples, shrines, river, canals, malls, jazz bars, and historic sites of Bangkok
Read MoreAncient City of Infinite Charms: Hanoi, Vietnam
A tour of Hanoi with its lakes, temples, museums, and shops in labyrinthine streets of the Old Town reveals a Chinese- and French-inflected though distinctively Vietnamese heritage
Read MoreWhy Asia Needs More Liberal Arts (and Sciences)
There are a growing number of British universities building campuses in Asian countries, including China, Vietnam, and Malaysia. Americans, the leading proponents of liberal arts education in the world, are less active in this region, though now Yale, Duke, NYU, and a few other intrepid explorers are leading the way. For the rest of you out there, I have a simple message: The time to invest in liberal arts education in Asia is now!
Read MoreNight Train to Singapore
In my previous post, I recapped a five-week tour of Asia that was the first part of my two-part recruiting mission for DKU and the launch of our new undergrad degree program in fall 2018. This time I’ve decided to break up my current Asia tour into separate posts by country, starting with Singapore.
Read MoreQuick Asian Impressions from a Whirlwind Recruiting Tour (Part 1 of 2)
Last month I had the unusual opportunity to visit five different countries/regions in Asia, including Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Hong Kong/Macau, and Korea. This was the first of a two-part tour that I am conducting of schools in Asia as part of our global recruitment efforts for Duke Kunshan University’s new undergraduate degree program, which we are launching in fall 2018.
Read MoreMy Chinese Alter Ego, or What's In a Name?
Everyone who studies Chinese as a foreign language—or any foreign language for that matter—intensively and long enough will be familiar with this phenomenon. Peter Hessler writes about it in his own books about his experiences in China. The idea is that when you learn another language and culture deeply enough, you take on an alternate identity when speaking that language and engaging with that culture.
Read MoreI'm a zhongguo tong, dammit (and proud of it!)
Last week, the Wall Street Journal published an essay by Daniel Bell, a noted scholar of Chinese philosophy who teaches at Tsinghua University in Beijing. The essay came with the intriguing title “Why Anyone can be Chinese”. Now I call this going down the rabbit hole of identity politics. To do so is like stepping onto a minefield, and Dr. Bell bravely if somewhat naively did so when publicly expressing his wish to be considered Chinese.
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