A conference trip to Changsha and a visit to the famed museum containing the awe-inspiring discoveries of the Mawangdui tombs.
Read More杜甫江阁 The Dufu Pavilion on the Changsha riverside
杜甫江阁 The Dufu Pavilion on the Changsha riverside
A conference trip to Changsha and a visit to the famed museum containing the awe-inspiring discoveries of the Mawangdui tombs.
Read MoreThe view from Tianzishan in Zhangjiajie
Notes from a DKU trip to the famous mountain landscape that inspired the film Avatar.
Read MoreLet the rumpus begin! Thousands of educators arrive for the start of the NAFSA conference in DC on May 28 2019 and hit the Expo, a vast underground hall filled with booths representing international education orgs from around the world.
Notes from a trip to DC for my first NAFSA conference.
Read MoreThe Benny Benack Quartet with guest musician Walter Blanding, at Jazz at Lincoln Center Shanghai April 30 2019
A fine performance at the Jazz at Lincoln Center club in Shanghai by Benny Benack and band.
Read MoreOn the Long March of the Flaneurs: left to right are Remi, Mickey, Annette, Duncan, ?, and Han Zheng
A stroll along the streets of Shanghai with some of the leading resident experts of its history.
Read MoreA fisherman casting his net along the Ningbo riverside
A family trip to one of China’s most important southern coastal cities, and a treasure trove of culture.
Read MoreThe Fab Four
My first attempt at a “podcast” to explain my thoughts and feelings about my favorite band of all time.
Read MoreThat’s a mighty big horn section! Wynton Marsalis (back left) and big band at Jazz at Lincoln Center Shanghai
Getting up close and friendly with one of the world’s greatest living jazz musicians.
Read MoreMount Yotei in Niseko
A weekend getaway in Niseko, and catching up with Dartmouth alumni Cliff Bernstein and others in the Asia Pacific region
Read MoreThe Acton Boxborough Regional High School Boys’ Swim Team in 1987. Coach Johnson is far right in last row.
Some memories and reflections on my years of swimming competitively in high school in the 1980s and on the best coach I’ve ever had, Jeff Johnson (1945-2019)
Read MoreA screenshot of Dr. Christian Henriot’s talk at Stanford University on his latest project, from a video posted on his own website ankeqiang.org
In a previous entry on this website, I posted some maps of Shanghai’s leisure and entertainment quarters that I made while researching my doctoral dissertation on Shanghai’s Jazz Age dance industry in the 1920s-1940s. As usual, I posted the entry on Facebook, and I gave a shoutout to Christian Henriot, letting him know that he had been a big influence on my research in those days. He responded to let me know that he is now working on a HUGE mapping project, mapping out Shanghai’s entertainment world over a century of its development. This project came out of another project, which our colleague at East China Normal University, Professor Jiang Jin, was working on with a group of her students. Dr. Henriot describes how this project came about and what its implications might be in a talk he gave at Stanford University in 2018. A video of the talk is posted on his website ankeqiang.org.
In a nutshell, Dr. Jiang’s students transcribed advertisements of entertainment and performances published in four newspapers between the late 19th century and mid-20th century, including the Shenbao, China’s foremost newspaper in that era. Dr. Henriot has taken this info and with the aid of students he created a database and a set of maps to map out the entertainment world of Shanghai over a century of its development. It’s a fascinating project with great potential to enhance our understanding of the cultural and social history of our fair city.
Dr. Henriot also developed another website called virtualshanghai.net, which is a repository of thousands of digital images and maps of Shanghai as well as other information on the city’s history. He has also published numerous academic papers and books on the city’s history, with subjects ranging from the history of prostitution to governance, wartime refugees, and deaths in Shanghai. I know of no other historian of Shanghai writing in the English (and French) language, who is so prolific and who uses such a wealth of data culled in newspapers and archives to research and interpret the history of Shanghai.
I was so impressed by Dr. Henriot’s latest project that I shared the video of his talk yesterday in my class on Shanghai history. I hope we can get the chance to invite Dr. Henriot to come to Duke Kunshan University to deliver this talk in person next time he is in Shanghai!
This was one of many early jazz bands with an Oriental theme. Source: Polarityrecords.com
In the days of early jazz (1920s-1930s), Shanghai was a popular theme for jazz orchestras in the United States. Here are some examples.
Read MoreA New Year display at the Lantern Festival in the City God Temple area of Shanghai
New Year’s holiday greetings and a night visit to the Old Town, the Bund, and Nanjing Road
Read MoreCorner of Fenyang Road and Huaihai Road in Shanghai, taken on Jan 19 2019
Some reflections on the challenge of changing from a quantity-obsessed nation to one more focused on quality—quality of products, quality of life, quality of education etc.—while also having to deal with increased inequality in Chinese society. Partly inspired by our new book Polarized Cities.
Read MoreTen most popular blogs on shanghai sojourns by popular vote
Read MoreHenry David Thoreau in a daguerreotype taken in 1856 by Benjamin D. Maxham.Credit Benjamin D. Maxham/Thoreau Society and the Walden Woods Project (NY Times)
I just completed Thoreau’s bio on the last day of 2018. One of the many revelations I gained from reading this wonderful biography Henry David Thoreau: A Life by Laura Dassow Walls (2017) is what an amazing scientist he was and how keen were his powers of observation and analysis of the natural world. I suppose this shouldn’t come as a surprise—after all, this is the man who famously spent a year or more living in a cabin in the woods on the edge of Walden Pond in Concord, Massachusetts. And yet I’d been used to thinking of him more as a political philosopher and “transcendendalist” than a scientist.
Read MoreI promised myself that by year’s end I'd finish the massive bio of Brahms by Jan Swafford (Johannes Brahms, a Biography, Vintage Books, 1997), which I've been reading all year with great enjoyment. It's been slow going, since it’s such a huge compendium of knowledge and information about the life and times of Johannes Brahms and his many friends, colleagues, and relations over a long lifetime of music-making. Also, every time Swafford goes into an analysis of the music Brahms was composing during different periods of his life, which is often, I find myself stopping to listen to the works he's describing.
Read MoreA boat moored on the edge of the Mekong River, near where the Rustic Pathways Base Camp is located.
An account of a recent trip to Luang Prabang in Laos where I attended a conference on service learning, mixed cement in a remote mountain village, and toured the temples of this UNESCO World Heritage site.
Read MoreThe author on the rooftop of CaixaForum in Barcelona
Some tips for urban travelers who want to get the most of the city they are visiting, from a Shanghai flaneur in Barcelona (kinda like an Englishman in New York)
Read MoreThe gorgeous view of Barcelona from Park Guell, where you can see the cranes above Sagrada Familia as well as the Barcelona Arts Hotel facing the Mediterranean
A recounting of a week long trip to Barcelona for the first time, told by a Shanghai flaneur in the second person.
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