Viewpoint
07.27.20

Pandemic Responses Suffer from Common Ailments

William C. Summers

As the world continues to reel from the COVID-19 pandemic, the onslaught of new developments, disrupted routines, and fast-evolving medical research and advice trap us in a kind of eternal present. Each day feels unprecedented. But, at least...

Books
05.15.17

A World Trimmed with Fur

In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, booming demand for natural resources transformed China and its frontiers. Historians of China have described this process in stark terms: pristine borderlands became breadbaskets. Yet Manchu and Mongolian archives reveal a different story. Well before homesteaders arrived, wild objects from the far north became part of elite fashion, and unprecedented consumption had exhausted the region’s most precious resources.

Culture
04.19.16

A Newly Translated Book Revisits Japan and China’s Wartime History

Karen Ma

Award-winning screenwriter and author Geling Yan has written more than 20 novels and short story collections about China, many adapted to film or TV, including Coming Home and The Flowers of War, both of which...

Excerpts
08.10.15

What Happened to the Settlers the Japanese Army Abandoned in China

Michael Meyer

Seventy years ago today, thousands of Japanese settlers—mostly women and children—found themselves trapped in an area then known as Manchuria, or Manchukuo, the name of the puppet state the Japanese military established in 1931....

The NYRB China Archive
06.04.15

In North Korea: Wonder & Terror

Ian Buruma
from New York Review of Books

The northeast of China used to be called Manchuria. Another name was “the cockpit of Asia.” Many wars were fought there. A French priest who traveled through the region in the 1920s wrote: “Although it is uncertain where God...

Sinica Podcast
03.23.15

In Manchuria: A Village Called Wasteland

Kaiser Kuo, David Moser & more
from Sinica Podcast

Kaiser Kuo and David Moser are joined by Michael Meyer, the author of The Last Days of Old Beijing and now...

Media
03.04.15

The Other China

Michael Meyer & Ian Buruma
Writers Michael Meyer and Ian Buruma engage in a discussion co-sponsored by The New York Review of Books centered on Meyer’s new book, In Manchuria: A Village Called Wasteland and the Transformation of Rural China, which combines immersion...
Culture
02.04.15

‘This is not that China Story’

James Carter & Michael Meyer

James Carter spent much of the 1990s researching the modern history of Harbin, China’s northernmost major city, in the region that...

Excerpts
01.28.15

The View from Wasteland

Michael Meyer

In winter the land is frozen and still. A cloudless sky shines off snow-covered rice paddies, reflecting light so bright, you have to shield your eyes. I lean into a stinging wind and trudge north up Red Flag Road, to a village...

Half A Century Of Harvesting Souls In China

Mark O'Neill writes about the life of his Presbyterian missionary grandfather, Frederick, who first moved to Manchuria in search of souls to save in 1897 and ended up staying for 45 years.

 

Postcard
06.06.12

The Lesser Wall

Michael Meyer

There is no such place as Manchuria, but the word still resonates like a bell struck a century before. The region is now more prosaically called dongbei—the northeast—yet its contemporary toponyms sing of its imperial...

The NYRB China Archive
05.17.73

Rules of the Game

John Gittings
from New York Review of Books

On September 18, 1931, a very small bomb caused a very minor explosion on the South Manchurian Railway just north of Mukden, a railway controlled by the Japanese and crucial to their economic domination of Manchuria. The explosion was denounced...