All things old China - books, anecdotes, stories, podcasts, factoids & ramblings from the author Paul French

Big Time Jewish Shanghai Movie Planned

Posted: April 11th, 2011 | No Comments »

Now calm down – it could be good, it could be bad, it could be indifferent but it seems a big time movie is planned on old Jewish Shanghai. Apparently it’s a Sino-US creation top be called The Melanie Violin. Refugees, World War Two, US$30-45mn, from a novel by He Ning (apparently a Chinese-American writer who I’m afraid I’ve never heard of and Google doesn’t seem to have heard of either so maybe, God Forbid!, Xinhua‘s got it wrong?) and a Jewish violinist falling in love with a Shanghainese girl – aahh, cross-cultural relationships!! very nice, a bit more 2011 than 1943 though. Xinhua has very brief details here. Xinhua boldly asserts that, ‘Today, there are still some Jewish descendants living in Shanghai.’ If they mean there are some Jews in Shanghai then fair enough obviously; if they mean there are people living in Shanghai now who lived in the old Ghetto then that’s a little more of a claim – if there are any do get in touch!!

Still, Auschwitz survivor and Schindler’ s list producer Branko Lustig is apparently involved so who knows…could be a winner.

BTW: in case you’re not sure where it was – here’s Shanghai with the ghetto area highlighted.



RAS LECTURE – Shanghai Nightlife and the Modern Chinese Woman – April 12th

Posted: April 11th, 2011 | No Comments »

An RAS China event in Shanghai that may be of interest to readers of this blog should you be in that part of the world:

RAS LECTURE

Tuesday 12th April, 2011 at 7:00 p.m.

Tavern, Radisson Plaza Xingguo Hotel 78 Xing Guo Road,Shanghai

兴国宾馆 上海市兴国路78号

Shanghai Nightlife and the Modern Chinese Woman

Andrew David Field, PhD

This talk aims to trace changes in the roles and status of women in the nightlife of Shanghai over the past century. In the late 19th century, the city boasted a rich courtesan culture and Chinese courtesans emerged as the first public female figures in urban life.  They were also the first women to embrace the Western cultures of urban modernity.

By the 1920s, new opportunities arose for women in the city in the wake of political and social developments associated with the May Fourth Era.  Not coincidentally, Chinese society began to embrace the “Jazz Age” and men and women stepped out for a night of dancing in the city’s cabarets.

During the ‘20s and ‘30s, the wunu or dance hostesses who worked in these ballrooms drew on the culture pioneered by the courtesans of earlier decades but also on cultures of Hollywood films and the American taxi-dance halls and became icons of femininity for a New China.

The Revolution of 1949 and the Mao years saw an end to these developments and social dancing went deep underground, but that era also elevated the status and power of women in many areas ranging from marriage to the workplace.

By the 1980s, with the dawn of the “opening and reforms” era, people in Shanghai were dancing out in the open again, but this time with men and women dancing on a more equal footing.  Then in the 1990s, the city opened up once again to international commerce, trade, and culture, and a new era of nightclubs and fancy bars emerged.

Today, women play ambiguous roles as customers, entertainers, and hostesses in the city’s nightclubs, and the legacy of the 19th century can still be seen in the city’s club cultures.  Accompanied by plenty of visual images, this lecture will trace these developments as we examine the shifting roles and identities of women in Shanghai’s nightscape.

Andrew Field is an independent scholar of Chinese history and culture living and working in Shanghai.

Entrance: RMB 30 (RAS members) and RMB 80 (non-members) those unable to make the donation but wishing to attend may contact us for exemption, prior to the RAS Lecture. Membership applications and membership renewals will be available at this event.

RSVP: to RAS Enquiry desk enquiry@royalasiaticsociety.org.cn


Zed Asian Arguments Launch – Ballot Box China – April 12th, London

Posted: April 10th, 2011 | No Comments »

I’m very happy that a new series of books I’ve been developing for Zed Books in London will launch this week with the publication of Kerry Brown’s study of the recent developments in village democracy (or lack of) in China – Ballot Box China. The idea of Zed Asian Arguments, of which I’m the series editor, is that they are shorter books (around 60,000 words) that raise issues from the region from the bottom up. We’ve had enough top down analyses to last us a lifetime and precious few bottom up analyses. The idea of my series is to look at how major developments, in this case village democracy in China, is perceived and affects local communities. As Kerry had spent a lot of time as an observer of elections across China and talked with participants and candidates I asked him to write the book. We’ve heard enough from academics and journalists about what the government thinks, I thought it was time to try and work out what the would-be electorate thinks.

And so we’re finally going to get to launch the first book in the series – more are coming covering issues as diverse as local environmental activism in China, the realities of urbanisation in China, China’s soft power efforts, what ordinary North Koreans think and the position of Burmese migrant workers in Thailand. I’m afraid I can’t be in London for the launch but hopefully some of you can get along.

You are invited to the launch of

Ballot Box China

By Kerry Brown

‘Chinese Grassroots Democracy and What It Means for China’s Future’


Tuesday April 12th 2011

5.30 to 6.30pm

Chatham House

10 St James’s Square

London
SW1Y 4LE

RSVP: sshah@chathamhouse.org.uk

Speakers will include author Kerry Brown, head of the Asia Programme, Chatham House.

Event chaired by Jonathan Fenby, head of China research, Trusted Sources.

The speakers will explain how, in the last 20 years, China has undertaken one of the world’s largest experiments in grassroots democracy. Across over half a million villages in China almost one million elections have taken place since 1988, with over three million officials elected. Chinese farmers still account for half of the Chinese population and a quarter of its economic output. With villages remaining restive, what does this mean for the future of the country as a whole – and what clues do these elections give to China’s own possible democratic future?

‘A sober, readable and much-needed corrective to the idea, promoted with great enthusiasm and increasing success by the ruling communist party, that western notions of democracy are alien to China’s political traditions and culture. But Ballot Box China is not starry-eyed either, placing the issue of democracy firmly in the context of China’s own internal debate about political reform.’

Richard McGregor, author of The Party: The Secret Life of China’s Communist Leaders.

‘This remarkably clear-eyed primer examines the state of democracy in China from the ground up, in all its complexity. From pen-portraits of local activists to insiders’ analyses, Ballet Box China offers one of the best explanations of how the world’s newest superpower is governed.’

Louisa Lim, NPR Beijing Correspondent

For more information, go to www.zedbooks.co.uk/ballot_box_china