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

Beijing Bookworm Talk This Wednesday – Beijing Postcards on the City’s Central Axis

Posted: July 12th, 2011 | No Comments »

An interesting talk with a lot of very interesting images from Simon Gjore and the Beijing Postcards people at the bookworm this week:

where: Beijing Bookworm

When: Wednesday 13th July, 7.30pm

Through their collection of historical photos, Beijing Postcards will tell the history of the south-north central axis and how it has affected the capital for more than 600 years. This 7.8 km long axis divides the old capital in two, with all the important pieces of architecture placed along or directly upon this commanding stretch – among them the imperial throne hall, Temple of Heaven, Tiananmen Gate and the Drum and Bell Towers.


Midnight in Peking – Sneak Preview of my new Cover

Posted: July 8th, 2011 | No Comments »

My forthcoming new book Midnight in Peking: How the Murder of a Young Englishwoman Haunted the Last Days of Old China is launched initially in Australia and Asia in September. It’ll be launched in the UK, Europe and North America in 2012 to give me a chance to get everywhere. Penguin Australia have put my new cover up on the web so I might as well show it off here to. I rather like it – and we looked at a gazillion designs before settling on this one. In fact the more I see the more it grows on me. Hopefully bookshops will feel the same and feel it worthy of displaying with the cover facing outwards (the Holy Grail!!).


Range Road – A Mystery Solved – Seventh Day Adventists in Old Shanghai

Posted: July 7th, 2011 | 1 Comment »

Back in April I appealed for help in identifying a rather interesting building that had been perplexing me on the old Range Road (now Wujin Road). Range Road marked the northern border of the International Settlement in Hongkou (Hongkew) where it met Chinese Shanghai in the form of Paoshan (now Boashan). The structure – below – seemed to me neither residential, commercial or quite (despite feint overtones) religious while not being typical of any Shanghai Municipal Council architectural styles. Just to jog your memory here it is:

Anyway, the very smartypants (and excellent photographer) Sue Anne Tay appears to have solved the mystery. She managed to acertain (in fine Sherlock Holmes style…or is that Nancy Drew?) that the building covers several numbers including numbers 193 but also 181 and 171 Wujin Road. Still, she has worked out that this is indeed the former Seventh-Day Adventist Church (沪北会堂), which feels right – religious feeling but not a classical style church. Seems it was built originally around 1905 and then modified into the structure we see now around 1924 while, probably being the first Seventh-Day Adventist church in Shanghai. Now what we need is a Seventh Day Adventist who’s into Shanghai history from before 1949 and we’re home and dry!!

By the way in terms of architectural style I did come across this picture of the Seventh Day Adventist Church in Edinburgh which is of a similar style and period.


Hongkew Park as it was

Posted: July 6th, 2011 | No Comments »

Back in February I posted some pictures of Hongkew Park before 1949 and as it is now as Lu Xun Park. The stadium now leans over a portion of the old open ground. Here’s one more picture of Hongkew Park I came across recently. The bandstand and all the lovely old buildings in a sort of compradoric style the background are long gone. I don’t have an exact date though the dress of the family in the picture out for a stroll in the park is clearly Edwardian placing this some time before the First World War.Interesting I do believe that some of the saplings still exist as full grown trees now. The youth of the trees indicates that this picture is probably from not that long after the park in this form was laid out – 1905 (though open land used for sports and rifle practise existed from the 1890s).


British Soldiers on Parade in Tientsin – 1920-something

Posted: July 6th, 2011 | No Comments »

A picture I came across recently of British soldiers on parade in Tientsin (Tianjin) sometime in the late 1920s I believe. Clearly it’s winter is about all I know I’m afraid. Anyone who can shed any light then please do.


We’re of to Canton – River of Smoke – Part II of Amitav Ghosh’s Ibis Trilogy

Posted: July 5th, 2011 | No Comments »

I praised Amitav Ghosh’s Sea of Poppies a couple of years back when it came out – the first in a planned trilogy, called the Ibis Trilogy, that would cover India, China and the world on the eve of the Opium Wars. Though some were critical of Ghosh’s pidgen English I enjoyed it (and blogged on it too) – even he exaggerated or invented a bit then so what – the trilogies are novels, fiction, inventions. You’re allowed to make stuff up.

And now the second in the trilogy is available – River of Smoke – and the action moves from India and the Indian Ocean to China, Canton (Guangzhou for you modern types) and the South China Seas. Typical Ghosh saga like tale telling and more of that luxurious and fun pidgen English. Ghosh has done his research on the old Canton factories too – this is the best novel around the Canton Factories at this time since Timothy Mo’s An Insular Possession.

As usual publishers blurb below – can’t spoil those occasional reviewing gigs!

In September 1838 a storm blows up on the Indian Ocean and the Ibis, a ship carrying a consignment of convicts and indentured laborers from Calcutta to Mauritius, is caught up in the whirlwind. When the seas settle, five men have disappeared – two lascars, two convicts and one of the passengers. Did the same storm upend the fortunes of those aboard the Anahita, an opium carrier heading towards Canton? And what fate befell those aboard the Redruth, a sturdy two-masted brig heading East out of Cornwall? Was it the storm that altered their course or were the destinies of these passengers at the mercy of even more powerful forces?

On the grand scale of an historical epic, River of Smoke follows its storm-tossed characters to the crowded harbors of China.  There, despite efforts of the emperor to stop them, ships from Europe and India exchange their cargoes of opium for boxes of tea, silk, porcelain and silver. Among them are Bahram Modi, a wealthy Parsi opium merchant out of Bombay, his estranged half-Chinese son Ah Fatt, the orphaned Paulette and a motley collection of others whose pursuit of romance, riches and a legendary rare flower have thrown together.  All struggle to cope with their losses – and for some, unimaginable freedoms – in the alleys and crowded waterways of 19th century Canton.  As transporting and mesmerizing as an opiate induced dream, River of Smoke will soon be heralded as a masterpiece of twenty-first century literature.


Through Time and Space with Chairman Mao – London, July 4th

Posted: July 4th, 2011 | No Comments »

Through Time and Space with Chairman Mao

Date: 4 July 2011 5.00pm – 4 July 2011 6.30pm
Location: The Boardroom University of Westminster 309 Regent Street London W1B 2UW
RSVP to: evansh@westminster.ac.uk

The Contemporary China Centre presents

Through Time and Space with Chairman Mao:
The Afterlife and Global Impact of the Great Helmsman

a panel discussion with

Pankaj Mishra and Jeffrey Wasserstrom

moderated by

Harriet Evans

How is Mao thought about in contemporary China and in other parts of Asia? In what ways have debates about his legacy and posthumous uses of his image paralleled or diverged from those of other larger-than-life figures associated with independence movements from Nehru to Nasser and from Ho to Che? What should we make of the “red song” movement sweeping through the PRC, which can be treated as fueled by nostalgic yearning or attributed to political maneuvering? These are the kinds of issues that will be taken up in a session moderated by the University of Westminster’s Harriet Evans, the curator of the exhibition ‘Poster Power: Images of Mao’s China, Then and Now’, and featuring the writer Pankaj Mishra and historian Jeffrey Wasserstrom.

Pankaj Mishra is the author of The Romantics: A Novel, which won the LA Times’ Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction, An End to Suffering: The Buddha in the World, and Temptations of the West: How to be Modern in India, Pakistan, Tibet and Beyond. He contributes essays and reviews to the New York Review of Books, the New Yorker, the Guardian, the London Review of Books, and the New York Times. His new book The Rise of Asia and the Remaking of the Modern World, will be published next year.

JeffreyWasserstrom is Professor of History and Chair of the Department at UC Irvine, where he also serves as the Editor of the Journal of Asian Studies. His books include Student Protests in Twentieth-Century China (Stanford, 1991), China’s Brave New World (Indiana, 2007), Global Shanghai, 1850-2010 (Routledge, 2009), and China in the 21st Century: What Everyone Needs to Know (OUP, 2011). He often writes for newspapers such as the Los Angeles Times and the Taipei Times, and magazines such as the Nation, Outlook India, Time and Newsweek. He blogs regularly for the Huffington Post, andis a co-founder of the “China Beat” blog/electronic magazine.

Harriet Evans is Professor of Chinese Cultural Studies, and Director of the Contemporary China Centre, University of Westminster. Her books include Women and Sexuality in China: Dominant Discourses of Female Sexuality and Gender since 1949 (Polity, 1997), and The Subject of Gender: Daughters and Mothers in Urban China (Rowman and Littlefield, 2008). She co-edited (with Stephanie Donald) Picturing Power in the People’s Republic of China: Posters of the Cultural Revolution (Rowman & Littlefield, 1999) and is curator of the exhibition ‘Poster Power: Images from Mao’s China, Then and Now.’

All welcome

Contemporary China Centre
Department of Modern and Applied Languages
University of Westminster
309 Regent Street. London, W1B 2UW

www.westminster.ac.uk/asian-studies

For enquiries about the Contemporary China Centre, please contact

Professor Harriet Evans
T: 020 7911 5000 ext 7603
E: evansh@westminster.ac.uk


Picturing China 1870-1950

Posted: July 4th, 2011 | No Comments »

After giving a plug to the Visualising China project at the University of Bristol the folk behind the site and the growing collection of photographs were kind enough to send me a copy of a small , but rather lovely, book they’ve produced called Picturing China 1870-1950. The book is mostly photographs but contains some good introductory essays on the history of the Chinese Maritime Customs, Chinese photographers, issues around examining old photos of China and Robert Bickers on the Shanghai Municipal Police.