A Q&A with writer Paul French about his latest book, City of Devils, a dark and delightful reconstruction of the city’s nocturnal side in its golden years
Read MoreFrom Thrills to Chills: A Review of the New Shanghai History Museum in People’s Park
A mixed review of the new history museum, which starts out promising and ends with something left to be desired
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Why I Remain in China After All These Years: Some Brief Thoughts and Reflections on the 30th Anniversary of My Engagement with the P.R.C.
Thirty years ago, I opted to stay in Asia and travel extensively in China. Today I look back on thirty years of engagement with China, around half of that living here and building a career and family.
Read MoreMy Top Six Bands from My Junior High Days (1981-83)
Last year I wrote a long piece excavating the top 25 bands and albums of my high school years. Now I want to go on an archeological expedition even deeper into the past, back to my junior high days (1981-83) to explore my favorite bands and albums from those formative times. To do so I have to dredge deep into my memories to recall which bands I treasured and put on the highest rotation during those years. Which albums, when listening to them 35 years later, can I still remember every song lyric, every lick, and every record scratch. Which albums, when even thinking about them now, conjure forth a cascade of dim and distant memories of “good times, bad times” with friends and family from my formative years.
Read MoreWalking Historical Shanghai: The Hotel and Theater District around Thibet and Nanjing Roads (Part II)
Part 2 of an exploratory walk around the People's Park/Square area to look at some of the old landmark hotels, amusement halls, and theaters from the 1920s-30s.
Read MoreWalking Historical Shanghai: The Hotel and Theater District Around Tibet Road (Part 1)
I’m in process of developing a new walking tour of Shanghai. After many years of covering the French Concession and the Bund, I’m moving onto new territory, namely the area around the People’s Square/Park, formerly the Recreation Ground of the International Settlement.
Read More三十年代多伦路上的暗杀案 Unraveling a Murder Mystery on Shanghai’s Duolun (Darroch) Road
Yesterday, after taking my daughter Sarah to her supplementary math class in the Hongkou district of Shanghai, we walked over to Duolun Road, a now famous historic street in this part of Shanghai. I was searching for the exact site where a Japanese seaman named Hideo Nakayama had been murdered in 1935, causing an international scandal that likely contributed to Japan’s march to war with China. And I found it.
Read MoreMy first APAIE conference
Over the past three days I have been attending the Asia Pacific Association for International Education or APAIE conference: https://www.apaie2018.org/. This year it was held in Singapore and had over 2200 attendees from this region as well as elsewhere around the world. This year it was held in Singapore and had over 2200 attendees from this region as well as elsewhere around the world .
Read MoreClimbing Into the Way Back Machine: Another Night of Music in Shanghai, Traveling Backwards From 1950s Rock’n’Roll to 1930s Big Band Jazz
A night one the town including a visit to the new Hoy Hoy, a rockabilly joint on Maoming Road, and to the JZ Club to see the Big Band
Read MoreWalking Shanghai: From the Oldest Part of Town to Some Brand New Nightlife Hotspots
Whereupon I go with my students, colleagues and friends upon a long, exhausting, enlightening walking tour of the city, encompassing the wreckage of the old and the glitter of the new
Read MoreThe Beijing Indie Scene is Alive and Kicking (Well, Almost)
A quick trip up to the Jing to check out the indie music scene and help a student kickstart his research project
Read MoreSunday Journal: Surviving the Cold War in Shanghai, filming a BBC doc, exploring Kunshan Nightscapes, and city walks
A week of urban madness in the snow, and trudging back and forth along the SH-KS corridor
Read More“Someday Soon, You Will All Be Speaking Chinese”—True or False?
Will everyone around the world be spending many years learning to speak, read and write Chinese soon? Methinks not. But more and more people will be acquiring the basic skills to communicate in Mandarin, and here's why...
Read MoreCatching Up with the Rock and Jazz Scenes in Shanghai: WHAI at Yuyintang and the JZ Big Band
Notes from a night on the town to catch up with the jazz and rock scenes, and with some old friends in those scenes
Read More新年快乐, 上海!Welcoming 2018 in Shanghai with a Walk On the Sunny Side of the Street
A stroll down a friendly neighborhood Shanghai lilong alleyway on a sunny New Year's Day restores one's faith in the city amidst the dark, cold winter days.
Read MoreThe Cafe to End All Cafes: The New Starbucks Reserve Roastery in Shanghai
Yep, it's here, folks: The biggest, grandest, most spectacular Starbucks on the planet, right down the road from where we live in Shanghai, on the corner of Nanjing and Shimen Roads. It caps off the recent opening of a grand new shopping mall called Taigu Hui 太古汇 which has been in the making for a few years now. Located above the fairly new subway station on Line 12, the mall and office complex opened up earlier this year. The new Starbucks R opened earlier this month.
Read MoreSo Long, Old West Gate! The Demise of an Old Shanghai Neighborhood
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.
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