Myanmar Emerges: The People Vs. The Power

Under half a century of dictatorship, dissidents used the arts to express outrage that would otherwise bring them long prison sentences. Now, they're speaking out in solidarity with villagers whose anti-mine protests are captivating the...

Culture
05.09.13

“I Just Want to Write”

Whether or not I deserved the Nobel Prize, I already received it, and now it’s time to get back to my writing desk and produce a good work. I hear that the 2013 list of Nobel Prize nominees has been finalized. I hope that once the new

...
Viewpoint
04.04.13

‘Hi! I’m Fang!’ The Man Who Changed China

Perry Link

In China in the 1980s, the word renquan (“human rights”) was extremely “sensitive.” Few dared even to utter it in public, let alone to champion the concept. Now, nearly three decades later, a grassroots movement called...

Ai Weiwei, China’s Useful Dissident

By enhancing his celebrity through publicity stunts, Ai has unwittingly empowered the Chinese Communist Party by outwardly conforming to its definition of a dissident: a narcissist more attuned to the whims of foreign admirers than to the...

The NYRB China Archive
02.09.13

Blogging the Slow-Motion Revolution

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Huang Qi is best known in China as the creator of the country’s first human rights website, Liusi Tianwang, or “June 4 Heavenly Web.” A collection of reports and photos, as well as the...

Media
01.08.13

Online and Off, Social Media Users Go to War for Freedom of Press in China

When Mr. Tuo Zhen, the propaganda chief of Guangdong province, rewrote and replaced the New Year’s editorial of the Southern Weekend newspaper without the consent of its editors, he probably did not think it would make much of a splash....

Review of Ai Weiwei at the Hirshhorn

Ai Weiwei will probably be regarded as the most important artist of the past decade. He is certainly its most newsworthy and arguably its most inspiring. Over the repressions of Chinese authorities, he has used a...

Web Posts Spur Free-Speech Debate in China

With his thin frame, shabby suit and graying hair, Chen Pingfu, who played his violin for handouts on the streets of the northwestern Chinese city of Lanzhou, hardly seemed to be a threat to anyone. But after he wrote a series of online essays...

The NYRB China Archive
07.14.12

China’s ‘Fault Lines’

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Yu Jie is one of China’s most prominent essayists and critics, with more than thirty books to his name. His latest work is a biography of his friend, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo, that was...

The NYRB China Archive
06.26.12

‘Pressure for Change is at the Grassroots

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

The Chinese legal activist Chen Guangcheng arrived in the United States last month following top-level negotiations between U.S. and Chinese officials. Several weeks earlier, Chen had dramatically escaped from house arrest in his village in...

The NYRB China Archive
06.14.12

‘In the Current System, I’d Be Corrupt Too’

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Bao Tong is one of China’s best-known political dissidents. In the early to mid 1980s, he was director of the Communist Party’s Office of Political Reform and the policy secretary for Zhao Ziyang, the party’s former general secretary. Just before...

The NYRB China Archive
05.24.12

London: The Triumph of the Chinese Censors

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

When I arrived at the London Book Fair on Monday, April 16, I saw a huge sign outside showing a cute Chinese boy holding an open book with the words underneath him: “China: Market Focus.” The special guest of this year’s fair was the Chinese...

Amnesty Internation Annual Report—China 

Amnesty International

Amnesty International surveys the landscape of human rights in China during 2011 and finds that China’s economic strength during the global financial crisis increased the country’s leverage in the domain of global human rights—mostly for the...

Viewpoint
05.20.12

Chen Guangcheng: A Hopeful Breakthrough?

Orville Schell

The arrival of the celebrated Chinese rights activist, Chen Guangcheng in the U.S. after years of prison and house arrest, raises the larger question of what the whole incident will come to mean in terms of the status of dissidents in China and...

The NYRB China Archive
05.03.12

Debacle in Beijing

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

The story of a blind Chinese lawyer’s flight to the US Embassy in Beijing is likely to ignite accusations and recriminations until the US presidential election in November. But what few will acknowledge is a harsher truth: that for all our desire...

The NYRB China Archive
04.30.12

Beijing Dilemma: Is Chen Guangcheng the Next Fang Lizhi?

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

The Chinese lawyer Chen Guangcheng, blind since childhood, self-taught in the law, defender of women’s rights to resist forced abortion, thorn in the side of local despots in his home district of Linyi in Shandong province, veteran of a four-year...

The NYRB China Archive
03.02.12

Learning How to Argue

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

One of China’s most outspoken public intellectuals, Ran Yunfei was detained last year after calls went out for China to emulate the “Jasmine Revolution” protests sweeping North Africa. He was held without trial for six months until last August....

The NYRB China Archive
02.08.12

He Told the Truth About China’s Tyranny

Simon Leys
from New York Review of Books

Better than the assent of the crowd: The dissent of one brave man!
—Sima Qian (145–90 BC)
Records of the Grand Historian

Truth will set you free.
—Gospel according to John

...
The NYRB China Archive
01.27.12

Is Democracy Chinese?

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Chang Ping is one of China’s best-known commentators on contemporary affairs. Chang, whose real name is Zhang Ping, first established himself in the late 1990s in Guangzhou, where his hard-hitting stories exposed scandals and championed freedom...

The NYRB China Archive
01.09.12

Banned in China

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

In late December, a foreign correspondent in Beijing emailed me to say that a four-page article on China I’d written for a special New Year’s edition of Newsweek had been carefully torn from each of the 731 copies of the magazine on sale...

The NYRB China Archive
11.09.11

Making It Big in China

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

Jianying Zha describes China as “way too big a cow for anyone to tackle in full.” Therefore, Ms. Zha says, she omits “the rural life, the small-town stories, the migrants working in huge manufacturing plants…continued poverty in parts of interior...

Books
10.01.11

No Enemies, No Hatred

Perry Link

When the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded on December 10, 2010, its recipient, Liu Xiaobo, was in Jinzhou Prison, serving an eleven-year sentence for what Beijing called “incitement to subvert state power.” In Oslo, actress Liv Ullmann read a long statement the activist had prepared for his 2009 trial. It read in part: “I stand by the convictions I expressed in my ‘June Second Hunger Strike Declaration’ twenty years ago—I have no enemies and no hatred.

The NYRB China Archive
08.15.11

‘I’m Not Interested in Them; I Wish They Weren’t Interested in Me’

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Amid the recent crackdown on dissidents by the Chinese government, the case of Liao Yiwu, the well-known poet and chronicler of contemporary China, is particularly interesting. For years, Liao’s work, which draws on extensive interviews with...

The NYRB China Archive
06.30.11

China’s Political Prisoners: True Confessions?

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

The Chinese artist Ai Weiwei’s ankle-deep heap of porcelain sunflower seeds bewitched recent visitors to London’s Tate Modern. But in early April Ai’s strong criticisms of the regime led to his disappearance somewhere in Beijing. On June 22,...

The NYRB China Archive
06.23.11

The Past and the Future

Fang Lizhi
from New York Review of Books

Concerning the Past:

  1. I have maintained that China should move forward with the reform of society. In many speeches before 1988, I openly expressed my advocacy of reform in China.
  2. I acknowledge that the following are my
  3. ...
The NYRB China Archive
04.22.11

China Misunderstood: Did We Contribute to Ai Weiwei’s Arrest?

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Like many artists, Ai Weiwei enjoys provoking. It isn’t just his finger-to-the-Chinese-government images that he has become known for but also how he does it: his obsessive-compulsive documentation of himself in photos, blogs, tweets, and rants...

Books
04.15.11

Tide Players

Zha Jianying

In Tide Players, acclaimed New Yorker contributor and author Jianying Zha depicts a new generation of movers and shakers who are transforming modern China. Through half a dozen sharply etched and nuanced profiles, Tide Players captures both the concrete detail and the epic dimension of life in the world’s fastest growing economy.

The NYRB China Archive
02.17.11

Middle East Revolutions: The View from China

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

Chinese authorities have done what they can to block news of Egyptian people-power from spreading to China. Reports about Egypt in China’s state-run media have been brief and vacuous. On February 6, at the height of the protests, the People’s...

The NYRB China Archive
12.13.10

At the Nobel Ceremony: Liu Xiaobo’s Empty Chair

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

On December 10, I attended the award ceremony in Oslo, Norway, for the Nobel Peace Prize, which the government of China had a few days earlier declared to be a “farce.” The recipient was a friend of mine, the Chinese scholar and essayist Liu...

The NYRB China Archive
11.11.10

A Hero of Our Time

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

On October 8, Liu Xiaobo became the first Chinese to receive the Nobel Peace Prize and one of only three winners ever to receive it while in prison. The Oslo committee had already received a warning from Beijing not to give Liu the prize because...

The NYRB China Archive
10.18.10

‘A Turning Point in the Long Struggle’: Chinese Citizens Defend Liu Xiaobo

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

It would be hard to overstate how much the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Liu Xiaobo on October 8 has meant to China’...

The NYRB China Archive
10.14.10

A Hero of the China Underground

Howard W. French
from New York Review of Books

As a poet and chronicler of other people’s lives, Liao Yiwu is a singular figure among the generation of Chinese intellectuals who emerged after the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989. Unlike the leaders of Beijing’s student...

The NYRB China Archive
10.11.10

Jailed for Words: Nobel Laureate Liu Xiaobo

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

On October 8, Liu Xiaobo became the first Chinese to receive the Nobel Peace Prize and one of only three winners ever to receive it while in prison. The Oslo committee had already received a warning from Beijing not to give Liu the prize because...

The NYRB China Archive
02.17.10

Locked Out: Beijing’s Border Abuse Exposed

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

On February 12, Chinese human rights campaigner Feng Zhenghu was allowed to return to Shanghai after a 92-day stay in diplomatic limbo at the Tokyo Narita airport. Having left China last April to visit family in Japan, Feng, who is a Chinese...

The NYRB China Archive
01.27.10

What Beijing Fears Most

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

On December 29, four days after being sentenced to eleven years in prison for “subversion of state power,” the Chinese writer Liu Xiaobo filed an appeal to a higher court. For many familiar with the Chinese regime, the decision seemed quixotic:...

The NYRB China Archive
12.21.09

The Trial of Liu Xiaobo: A Citizens’ Manifesto and a Chinese Crackdown

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

One year ago, the Chinese literary critic and political commentator Liu Xiaobo was taken away from his home in Beijing by the Chinese police, who held him without charge for six months, then placed him under formal arrest for six more months, on...

The NYRB China Archive
12.07.09

Copenhagen: China’s Oppressive Climate

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

As the UN’s Climate Change Conference opens in Copenhagen this week, much attention will focus on China and the United States, who are, by a wide margin, the world’s two leading emitters of greenhouse gases. The success of the conference will...

The NYRB China Archive
10.21.09

Obama’s Bad Bargain with Beijing

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

As the echoes of China’s spectacular military parade on October 1 were subsiding, officials in the Obama administration, in quieter settings in...

Human Rights in China: Trends and Policy Implications

Congressional Research Service

Human rights has been a principal area of U.S. concern in its relations with the People’s Republic of China (PRC), particularly since the violent government crackdown on the Tiananmen democracy movement in 1989. Some policy makers contend that...

The NYRB China Archive
05.15.08

Twelve Suggestions for Dealing with the Tibetan Situation, by Some Chinese Intellectuals

Wang Lixiong
from New York Review of Books
  1. At present the one-sided propaganda of the official Chinese media is having the effect of stirring up inter-ethnic animosity and aggravating an already tense situation. This is extremely detrimental to the long-term goal of safeguarding

  2. ...
The NYRB China Archive
02.14.08

He Won’t Give In

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

On June 4, 1989, having heard that the Tiananmen demonstrations had been lethally crushed, Kang Zhengguo, a professor of literature at a university in Shaanxi province, pinned a piece of paper to his chest displaying the words “AIM YOUR GUNS HERE...

The NYRB China Archive
08.10.06

‘June Fourth’ Seventeen Years Later: How I Kept a Promise

Pu Zhiqiang
from New York Review of Books

The weekend of June 3, 2006, was the seventeenth anniversary of the Beijing massacre and also the first time I ever received a summons. It happened, as the police put it, “according to law.” Twice within twenty-four hours Deputy Chief Sun Di of...

The NYRB China Archive
02.09.06

Liu Binyan (1925-2005)

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

Liu Binyan, the distinguished Chinese journalist and writer who died of cancer on December 5, 2005, in exile in New Jersey, at the age of eighty, was an inveterate defender of the poor and the oppressed, a man with a powerful analytic mind. But...

The NYRB China Archive
07.17.03

On Leaving a Chinese Prison

Jiang Qisheng
from New York Review of Books
“What I did, what landed me in prison, was really quite simple—I just said in public what my fellow citizens were saying in all those other nooks.” —Jiang Qisheng...
The NYRB China Archive
01.27.03

China’s Psychiatric Terror

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

1.

At its triennial congress in Yokohama last September, the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) overwhelmingly voted to send a delegation to China to investigate charges that dissidents were being imprisoned and maltreated as “political...

The NYRB China Archive
12.20.01

Inside the Whale

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

Ian Buruma is a powerful storyteller and much of his story about Chinese rebels is very sad. This sadness persists throughout his long journey, starting in the United States, where he met most of the well-known dissident Chinese exiles, and...

The NYRB China Archive
03.05.98

Talking with Wei Jingsheng

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

Speaking to a small group in London this January, nearly two months after he was expelled from China, the Chinese dissident Wei Jingsheng told his somewhat startled listeners, “The earliest human rights movement in the world was the ‘People’s...

The NYRB China Archive
06.12.97

Peking’s Choice

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

The recent sentence to six years in prison of one of Tibet’s supreme monks shows Peking’s determination to dominate all events in the region and bring to an end a period of intense confusion within the Chinese Communist Party. For a brief time...

The NYRB China Archive
06.09.94

The Prodigal Sons

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

What do Xi Yang, Wei Jingsheng, and Wang Juntao have in common? Yes, they are all “counter-revolutionary elements, subversives, splittists, black hands”—whatever Peking cares to call them—and all three are familiar with the Party’s prison...

The NYRB China Archive
03.25.93

The Party’s Secrets

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

Not long after Mao Zedong died in 1976, one of the editors of the Party’s People’s Daily said. “Lies in newspapers are like rat droppings in clear soup: disgusting and obvious.” That may have been true of the Party’s newspapers, which...

The NYRB China Archive
01.31.91

Brutality in China

Merle Goldman
from New York Review of Books

At the same time that President Bush is speaking up against Saddam Hussein’s human rights atrocities, he is appeasing China’s octogenarian leaders on the very same issue. In order to persuade China to cooperate in the United Nations actions...

The NYRB China Archive
11.09.89

Vengeance in China

Merle Goldman
from New York Review of Books

While China’s leaders try to assure the outside world and themselves that “everything is back to normal,” the national problems that existed before the June 4 crackdown have become much worse. China’s students and intellectuals were already...

The NYRB China Archive
10.12.89

China Witness, 1989

Jonathan D. Spence
from New York Review of Books

In response to: China’s Spring from the June 29, 1989 issue

To the Editors:

The absolute cynicism displayed by the current Chinese leadership as they present their...

The NYRB China Archive
06.29.89

China’s Spring

Orville Schell
from New York Review of Books

To stand, in early May, atop the Gate of Heavenly Peace, which guards the entrance to the Forbidden City, and look across the vast crowd of people jammed into Tiananmen Square was to have a historically new sense of what Mao called “the broad...

The NYRB China Archive
01.19.89

The Price China Has Paid: An Interview with Liu Binyan

Nathan Gardels
from New York Review of Books

Liu Binyan is a sixty-two-year-old writer and journalist who is regarded as the preeminent intellectual advocating reform in China today. During the mid-1950s and again throughout the post-Mao period, he has strongly criticized Communist party...

The NYRB China Archive
08.13.81

China: How Much Dissent?

Jonathan D. Spence
from New York Review of Books

In the year 278 BC an aristocrat and poet named Qu Yuan took his own life by throwing himself into the waters of the Milo River. Qu Yuan had once been the powerful adviser to the ruler of the Chu kingdom, specializing in legal affairs and...

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