The NYRB China Archive
06.03.14

The Tanks and the People

Liao Yiwu
from New York Review of Books

Twenty-five years ago, before the Tiananmen massacre, my father told me: “Son, be good and stay at home, never provoke the Communist Party.”

My father knew what he was talking about. His courage had been broken, by countless political...

The NYRB China Archive
06.02.14

‘You Won’t Get Near Tiananmen!’: Hu Jia on the Continuing Crackdown

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Hu Jia is one of China’s best-known political activists. He participated in the 1989 Tiananmen protests as a fifteen-year-old, studied economics, and then worked for environmental and public health non-governmental organizations. A practicing...

The NYRB China Archive
05.22.14

The Smooth Path to Pearl Harbor

Rana Mitter
from New York Review of Books
In mid-February, as part of the plans for his official visit to Germany, Chinese President Xi Jinping asked to visit one of Berlin’s best-known sites: Peter Eisenman’s Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. The request was declined when it became...
The NYRB China Archive
05.20.14

Tiananmen: How Wrong We Were

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

Twenty-five years ago to the day I write this, I watched and listened as thousands of Chinese citizens in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square dared to condemn their leaders. Some shouted “Premier Li Peng resign.” Even braver ones cried “Down with Deng...

The NYRB China Archive
05.15.14

China: Detained to Death

Renee Xia & Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

On May 3, fifteen Beijing citizens—scholars, journalists, and rights lawyers—gathered informally at the home of Professor Hao Jian of the Beijing Film Academy to reflect on the 25th anniversary of the 1989 June Fourth massacre in Beijing. Two...

The NYRB China Archive
05.08.14

The China Challenge

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

In 1890, an undistinguished U.S. Navy captain published a book that would influence generations of strategists. Alfred Thayer Mahan’s The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660–1783 posited that great nations need potent, blue-water...

The NYRB China Archive
04.08.14

Solving China’s Schools: An Interview with Jiang Xueqin

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

In December, China stunned the world when the most widely used international education assessment revealed that...

The NYRB China Archive
03.24.14

Chinese Atheists? What the Pew Survey Gets Wrong

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Earlier this month, I came across a fascinating opinion survey by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project. The report asked people in forty countries whether belief in God is necessary for morality. Mostly, the...

The NYRB China Archive
03.20.14

Paddling to Peking

Roderick MacFarquhar
from New York Review of Books

For Richard Nixon’s foreign policy, 1971 was the best of years and the worst of years. He revealed his opening to China, but he connived at genocide in East Pakistan. Fortunately for him, the world marveled at the one, but was largely ignorant of...

The NYRB China Archive
03.06.14

The Brave Catholics of China

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Like most pilgrimage sites in China, the shrine in the village of Cave Gulley in Shanxi province is located partway up a mountain, reachable by steep stairs that are meant to shift worshipers’ attention from the world below to heaven above....

The NYRB China Archive
02.04.14

China’s Way to Happiness

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Richard Madsen is one of the modern-day founders of the study of Chinese religion. A professor at the University of California San Diego, the seventy-three-year-old’s works include Morality and Power in a Chinese Village, China and...

The NYRB China Archive
01.09.14

China: Reeducation Through Horror

Ian Buruma
from New York Review of Books

Here are two snippets from a Chinese Communist journal called People’s China, published in August 1956:

In 1956, despite the worst natural calamities in scores of years, China’s peasants, newly organized in co-

...
The NYRB China Archive
12.10.13

China: Five Pounds of Facts

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

No one seems to have measured exactly how old Chinese civilization is, but Endymion Wilkinson can probably give a more precise answer than anyone else. “1.6 billion minutes separate us from the Zhou conquest of the Shang,” he informs us at the...

The NYRB China Archive
12.05.13

The Surprising Empress

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

In the mid-1950s, when I was a graduate student of Chinese history, the Manchu Empress Dowager Cixi (1835–1908) was invariably condemned as a reactionary hate figure; Mao Zedong was admired. In the textbooks of that time, leading American...

The NYRB China Archive
11.21.13

Dreams of a Different China

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Last November, China’s newly installed leader, Xi Jinping, asked his fellow Chinese to help realize a “Chinese dream” of national rejuvenation. In the months since then, his talk has been seen as a marker in the new leadership’s thinking,...

The NYRB China Archive
11.07.13

How to Deal with the Chinese Police

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

A casual visitor to China today does not get the impression of a police state. Life bustles along as people pursue work, fashion, sports, romance, amusement, and so on, without any sign of being under coercion. But the government spends tens of...

The NYRB China Archive
10.25.13

Unhinged in China

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

In one of the central scenes in Jia Zhangke’s new film, a young man working in the southern Chinese manufacturing city of Dongguan goes to an ATM and finds that he’s broke. He’s just spent the past month betraying his friends and hopping from job...

The NYRB China Archive
10.24.13

China: “Capitulate or Things Will Get Worse”

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

The massacre of protesters in Beijing on June 4, 1989, and the harsh repression during the months immediately following put China into a foul mood. Among ordinary Chinese, the prestige of the Communist Party, whose leaders had ordered the brutal...

The NYRB China Archive
10.19.13

Who’s Afraid of Chinese Money?

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

“China is what it is. We have to be here or nowhere.” Chancellor George Osborne, Britain’s second-highest official, was...

The NYRB China Archive
10.15.13

Old Dreams for a New China

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Ever since China’s new leader, Xi Jinping, first uttered the phrase “China Dream” last year, people in China and abroad have been scrambling to decipher its meaning. Many nations have “dreams”; in Canada, the country’s most prominent popular...

The NYRB China Archive
08.26.13

China: When the Cats Rule

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

In the Northwest corner of Beijing’s old city is a subway and bus workshop. It was built in the early seventies on the site of the Lake of Great Peace, which was filled in as part of a plan to extend the city’s subway system. In the bigger...

The NYRB China Archive
08.15.13

The Man Who Got It Right

Ian Buruma
from New York Review of Books

1.

Near the beginning of Simon Leys’ marvelous collection of essays is an odd polemic between the author and the late Christopher Hitchens, fought out in these very pages. Leys takes Hitchens to task for attacking Mother Teresa in a book...

The NYRB China Archive
07.10.13

Censoring the News Before It Happens

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

Every day in China, hundreds of messages are sent from government offices to website editors around the country that say things like, “Report on the new provincial budget tomorrow, but do not feature it on the front page, make no comparisons to...

The NYRB China Archive
06.06.13

Faking It in China

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

One of the most striking features about daily life in China is how much of what one encounters has been appropriated from elsewhere. It’s not just the fake iPhones or luxury watches—pirated consumer goods are common in many developing countries....

The NYRB China Archive
05.09.13

Chen Guangcheng in New York

Jerome A. Cohen & Ira Belkin
from New York Review of Books

Following are excerpts from a recent conversation among Chen Guangcheng, the blind legal activist who was recently permitted to leave China and is currently a distinguished visitor at New York University School of Law; Jerome A. Cohen,...

The NYRB China Archive
04.25.13

China’s Sufis: The Shrines Behind the Dunes

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Lisa Ross’s luminous photographs are not our usual images of Xinjiang. One of China’s most turbulent areas, the huge autonomous region in the country’s northwest was brought under permanent Chinese control only in the mid-twentieth century....

The NYRB China Archive
04.25.13

The ‘Breaking of an Honorable Career’

Roderick MacFarquhar
from New York Review of Books

1.

In the 1950s, the late John King Fairbank, the dean of modern China studies at Harvard, used to tell us graduate students a joke about the allegation that a group of red-leaning foreign service officers and academics—the four Johns—had...

The NYRB China Archive
04.09.13

Tibet: The CIA’s Cancelled War

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

For much of the past century, U.S. relations with Tibet have been characterized by kowtowing to the Chinese and hollow good wishes for the Dalai Lama. As early as 1908, William Rockhill, a U.S. diplomat, advised the Thirteenth Dalai Lama that “...

The NYRB China Archive
04.04.13

Will the Chinese Be Supreme?

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

During the turbulent Maoist era from the 1950s to 1970s, China clashed militarily with some of its most important neighbors—India, Vietnam, the Soviet Union—and embarked on disastrous interventions in Indonesia and Africa. But by the 1980s, Deng...

The NYRB China Archive
03.21.13

Who Killed Pamela in Peking?

Jonathan D. Spence
from New York Review of Books

An ordinary winter evening in the Legation Quarter of Peking, where foreign embassies and consulates were located, January 7, 1937. Cold. The heavy sound of Japanese armored cars, out on patrol down the busy shopping streets that flank the...

The NYRB China Archive
02.15.13

Dancing in Empty Beijing

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

The Lunar New Year began last week as it always does, with a new moon. The empty sky seemed to empty Beijing of up to half its residents—authorities estimate that an incredible nine million people left the city, which usually has a population of...

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...

The NYRB China Archive
01.08.13

The Old Fears of China’s New Leaders

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

I felt a shudder of déjà vu watching the mounting protests inside China this week of the Communist Party for censoring an editorial in Southern Weekend, a well-known liberal newspaper in the southern city of Guangzhou. It is all too...

The NYRB China Archive
12.21.12

Beijing’s Doomsday Problem

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Over the past ten days, China has been riveted by accounts of what authorities say are its very own doomsday cult: the church of Almighty God, which has prophesized that the world will end today. Authorities have said the group staged illegal...

The NYRB China Archive
12.20.12

The New Chinese Gang of Seven

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

In traditional Chinese religion, a fashi, or ritual master, will recite a set of phrases to turn an ordinary space into a sacred area where the gods can descend to receive prayers and rejuvenate the community. The ceremony can last days...

The NYRB China Archive
12.06.12

Does This Writer Deserve the Prize?

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

On October 11 Peter Englund, permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy in Stockholm, announced that the Nobel Prize in Literature for 2012 will go to the fifty-seven-year-old Chinese writer Guan Moye, better known as Mo Yan, a pen name that...

The NYRB China Archive
11.22.12

China: Worse Than You Ever Imagined

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Last summer I took a trip to Xinyang, a rural area of wheat fields and tea plantations in central China’s Henan province. I met a pastor, a former political prisoner, and together we made a day trip to Rooster Mountain, a onetime summer retreat...

The NYRB China Archive
10.25.12

Who Was Mao Zedong?

Roderick MacFarquhar
from New York Review of Books

In Kashgar’s largest bazaar a few years ago, I spotted a pencil holder sporting an iconic Cultural Revolution image: Mao Zedong and Marshal Lin Biao smiling together. But Mao’s personally chosen heir apparent had been a nonperson since 1971, when...

The NYRB China Archive
10.11.12

An Honest Writer Survives in China

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

A little over a year ago, I went with the Chinese writer Yu Hua to his hometown of Hangzhou, some one hundred miles southwest of Shanghai, and realized that his bawdy books might not be purely fictional; their characters and situations seemed to...

The NYRB China Archive
10.01.12

Han Han: ‘Why Aren’t You Grateful?’

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

When looking for Chinese reactions to the anti-Japanese riots that took place in late September, it was probably not much of a surprise that the Western press turned to Han Han, the widely read Shanghai-based blogger. In characteristic form, Han...

The NYRB China Archive
09.27.12

China’s Lost Decade

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

It’s hard to believe, but just twenty years ago China was on the verge of abandoning the market reforms that have since propelled it to its current position as a world power. Conservatives had used the 1989 Tiananmen massacre to reverse the...

The NYRB China Archive
09.24.12

Shanghai: The Vigor in the Decay

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

This is a story that sounds familiar, that we think we know or can imagine: old houses torn down for luxury malls, ordinary people poorly compensated, an intimate way of life replaced by highways and high-rises.

All of this is happening in...

The NYRB China Archive
09.20.12

Beijing’s Dangerous Game

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

Over the past few days, angry crowds in more than thirty Chinese cities have trashed Japanese stores, overturned Japanese cars, shouted “Down with Japan,” and carried banners that demand Chinese sovereignty over the uninhabited Diaoyu Islands in...

The NYRB China Archive
09.04.12

Jesus vs. Mao?

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

In the intellectual ferment leading up to the 1989 Tiananmen protests, a much-watched series on Chinese television called River Elegy became closely identified with the hopes of China’s reformers. The six-part series, which used the...

The NYRB China Archive
08.16.12

News from the Dalai Lama

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

“I told President Obama the leaders of the Chinese Communist Party are missing a part of the brain, the part that contains common sense,” the Dalai Lama said to me during our conversation in London in mid-June.

But it can be

...
The NYRB China Archive
08.08.12

The New Olympic Arms Race

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

You can follow the Olympics two ways. First, there’s the right way: you pay attention to the athletes and root for great performances. You see them cry and hug each other in joy or look away in disgust at a bad performance. You empathize with...

The NYRB China Archive
08.02.12

Bo Xilai: The Unanswered Questions

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

The Chinese Communist Party has always put great emphasis on smooth surfaces, maintaining political “face” through a decorous exterior. Men at the top dye their hair black and every strand must be in place. But sometimes there are cracks in the...

The NYRB China Archive
08.02.12

Bo Xilai: The Unanswered Questions

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

The Chinese Communist Party has always put great emphasis on smooth surfaces, maintaining political “face” through a decorous exterior. Men at the top dye their hair black and every strand must be in place. But sometimes there are cracks in the...

The NYRB China Archive
07.30.12

The People’s Republic of Rumor

Richard Bernstein
from New York Review of Books

A group of people the other day were at the large shopping mall at a place called Shuangjing, just inside Beijing’s Third Ring Road, looking at their cell phones and comparing notes. “Don’t go to Sina Weibo—it’s too famous,” one person advised,...

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
06.21.12

Why the Dalai Lama is Hopeful

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

“I told President Obama the leaders of the Chinese Communist Party are missing a part of the brain, the part that contains common sense,” the Dalai Lama said to me during our conversation in London Wednesday.

But it can be put

...
The NYRB China Archive
06.21.12

China: Politics as Warfare

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

Mao’s Invisible Hand is one of those books that make one feel good about scholarship. It describes inner workings of Chinese Communist society about which few nonexperts know anything—it may even surprise the experts—and it will interest...

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
06.07.12

A Chinese Murder Mystery?

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

Roughly every decade, China’s political system cracks, its veil is rent, and its inner workings are laid bare. 2012, the Year of the Dragon, is turning out to be one of those periods when the country’s high priests can’t quite carry out their...

The NYRB China Archive
05.29.12

Finding Zen and Book Contracts in Beijing

Ian Johnson
from New York Review of Books

It’s a Sunday afternoon and Beijing’s biggest bookstore is preparing for a major event: the launch of a new book by a bestselling American author, who will be on hand for the occasion. Six-foot banners on the sidewalk out front announce the talk...

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...

The NYRB China Archive
05.10.12

On Fang Lizhi (1936–2012)

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

Fang Lizhi, a distinguished professor of astrophysics, luminary in the struggle for human rights in contemporary China, and frequent contributor to The New York Review, died suddenly on the morning of April 6. At age seventy-six he had...

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...

Pages