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

Canadian Pacific – Sailings to and from the Orient

Posted: April 30th, 2014 | No Comments »

From Canada to the Orient….

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The India-China Opium Trade in the Nineteenth Century

Posted: April 29th, 2014 | No Comments »

A new history of the China-India opium trade from Hunt Janin….

51FSZ5Zw2YL._From 1823 to 1860 a fleet of small, fast brigs and schooners carried chests of opium from India to China, often facing the challenges of pirates and typhoons along the way. This shadowy trade, conducted by American, British, and Indian firms, thrived despite its moral and legal consequences.

Drawing largely on primary sources, the story of the opium trade comes through in the voices of those who saw it firsthand. Appendices describe a favourite shipboard recipe, two of the ships involved in the trade and their crews, excerpts from accounts of the Opium War, and language equivalents for proper and place names. A bibliography is included, and maps and photographs help illumine this important and unusual period of history.


Asia House Bagri Foundation Literature Festival 2014 – 6th – 21st May 2014

Posted: April 27th, 2014 | No Comments »

Asia House Bagri Foundation Literature Festival 2014
6th21st May 2014

FINAL PROGRAMME ANNOUNCED

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Prize winning novelists Hanif Kureishi, Kamila Shamsie, Tash Aw and Romesh Gunesekera, award-winning BBC journalist John Sweeney, plus debates on North Korea, Tiananmen 25 years on and changing sexual mores across Asia, line-up alongside an evening of British Asian humour, Vietnamese cookery at lunchtime and interactive events for families

Now in its eighth year and with a new title sponsor, the Asia House Bagri Foundation Literature Festival is the only UK festival dedicated to pan-Asian writing and will take place at Asia House in May. A stimulating mix of literary talks, performance, topical debate, humour, cookery, tai chi and interactive family events from renowned authors, performers and thinkers- home-grown and from across Asia – come together in this truly unique festival.

With a range of events covering more than 17 countries, the Festival this year includes authors writing about China, Japan, Malaysia, North Korea, South Korea, Pakistan, India, as well as Thailand, Burma, Vietnam, Nepal, the Middle East, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Palestine, Sri Lanka and Britain.  This year’s theme is Changing Values across Asia.  Warming up with three exciting pre-festival events in April, Asia House will feature a session on China’s changing values with Booker Prize long-listed author Tash Aw and Yiyun Li, author of Kinder than Solitude; Man Asia Prize winner Kyung-sook Shin, who joins fellow South Korean novelist Krys Lee and British Pakistani Qaisra Shahraz to debate the effect of political separations on their countries and their writing, at an event in partnership with the British Council/London Book Fair Korea Market Focus and Why do Indians Vote?, a wide-ranging discussion on the world’s largest democracy and its upcoming election.

Continuing the ‘Changing Values’ theme into the main festival in May, acclaimed journalists and China experts Jonathan Mirsky, Michael Bristow and Jonathan Fenby explore China 25 years after Tiananmen; foreign correspondent Peter Popham, examines Burma two years after its milestone election, while Shereen el Feki  [Sex and the Citadel] and Sally Howard [The Kama Sutra Diaries] take a serious but entertaining look at changing sexual mores in the Middle East, India and Pakistan.

Literary superstar Hanif Kureishi launches the Festival on 6 May as he discusses his new novel, The Last Word, while award-winning Pakistani author Kamila Shamsie introduces her hotly anticipated novel of friendship, injustice and love, A God in Every Stone. The best of Asian literature is further celebrated as new works by acclaimed Sri Lankan novelist Romesh Gunesekera, one of Granta’s Best of Young British novelists Xiaolu Guo and Pakistani-born Roopa Farooki are previewed in a special showcase event ahead of publication. A new series, Extra Words will introduce debut authors from Pakistan, Nepal and Thailand.

Award-winning BBC reporter John Sweeney [North Korea Undercover] joins author of North Korea: State of Paranoia, Paul French to analyse the threat posed by that country, while historian John Keay introduces the first comprehensive history of South Asia as a whole with his new book Midnight’s Descendants. Digital freedom in East Asia will be analysed with Thai blogger Giles Ji Ungpakorn and Anja Kovacs from the Internet Democracy Project in Delhi and others, in an event in partnership with English PEN.

But not all events will focus on ‘Changing Asian Values’, some will be just for fun – look out for lunchtime cookery with The Vietnamese Market Cookbook authors and Tai chi, Origami, Ninja Meerkats and poetry workshops for children. Joining forces with Penned in the Margins at Rich Mix in East London, the festival programme includes The Shroud, a two-man, miniature epic about loss, time and the things that connect us, with Siddhartha Bose and Avaes Mohammed. British Asian humour will be hotly debated by a panel including journalist Sathnam Sanghera, BBC head of comedy Saurabh Kakkar, comedian Shazia Mirza and writer producer of hit TV shows Goodness Gracious Me, The Kumars at Number 42, The Office and Citizen Khan, Anil Gupta; and the author of Packing Up: Further Adventures of a Trailing Spouse, Brigid Keenan takes us on a wildly funny tour through her life in Kazakstan, Azerbaijan and Palestine.

In addition to events at Asia House, the Asia House Bagri Foundation Literature Festival I this year extends its youth engagement programmes with two-day writing workshops and author visits in 6 London area schools and 6 others across Newham, Manchester, Leicester and Birmingham aiming to reach 300+ students.  There is a student writing competition with the top five students winning a day of mentoring with writing, publishing and communications professionals.

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CT Loo – “But the man himself had always been a mystery”

Posted: April 26th, 2014 | No Comments »

A fascinating piece in this weekend’s Financial Times by David Pilling on CT Loo (below), the Paris-based Chinese antiquities dealer who arrived in France in 1902 and established a reputation as the major dealer in Chinese art and atrefacts in Europe. Very little has ever really been known about Loo for sure – his life has always been a mix of mystery, obfuscation and rumour. I stumbled across his famous pagoda like showroom in Paris many years ago and did eventually visit it properly some time back when in Paris searching for Chinoiserie remnants in the nearby Parc Monseau (see blog post here). Oddly enough CT Loo popped up again recently when I was asked to talk about Peking in 1930 at the Noguchi Museum in New York as part of the events they had organised around their exhibition on Noguchi’s time in Peking studying under Qi Baishi that year.

Here’s my small Loo anecdote then – while in Peking in 1930 the Japanese-American sculptor Noguchi had a small circle of western friends. Among these was the Frenchman Jean-Pierre Dubosc.

Dubosc was attached as a diplomat to the French Legation in Peking and an avid collector of Chinese artefacts. He also happened to be married to Janine Loo, one of CT Loo’s daughters. Dubosc was a habitué of the antique and curio shops of Peking from where he sourced various treasures for European and American museums (most notably the Guimet Museum in Paris, a specialist collection of Asian art) as well as for C.T. Loo’s dealership business.

Anyway, if you read one thing this weekend then this article is the one and it also promises a forthcoming biography of Loo, which I, for one, eagerly await.

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The Lone Flag: Memoir of the British Consul in Macau during World War II

Posted: April 26th, 2014 | No Comments »

Macao’s full and secret history during World War Two still remains to be told and political correctness and erstwhile later “patriots” of Beijing’s massive family and business interests still prevent that. However, John Reeves’s memoirs of his time as British Consul in Macao between 1941-1946 goes some way to filling that gap….

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When Hong Kong fell to the Japanese on Christmas Day 1941 Macao was left as a tiny isolated enclave on the China Coast surrounded by Japanese-held territory. As a Portuguese colony, Macao was neutral, and John Reeves, the British Consul, could remain there and continue his work despite being surrounded in all directions by his country’s enemy. His main task was to provide relief to the 9,000 or more people who crossed the Pearl River from Hong Kong to take refuge in Macao and who had a claim for support from the British Consul.

The core of this book is John Reeves’ memoir of those extraordinary years and of his tireless efforts to provide food, shelter and medical care for the refugees. He coped with these challenges as Macao’s own people faced starvation. Despite Macao’s neutrality, it was thoroughly infiltrated by Japanese agents and, marked for assassination, Reeves had to have armed guards as he went about his business. He also had to navigate the complexities of multiple intelligence agencies—British, Portuguese, Japanese, Chinese Nationalist—in a place that was described as the Casablanca of the Far East.

John Pownall Reeves (1909–78) was British Consul in Macao 1941–46.


RAS Shanghai 26/4/14 – Luke Him Sau Architect: China’s Missing Modern

Posted: April 25th, 2014 | No Comments »

RAS Weekender / M on the Bund Salon

SATURDAY 26th April 2014
4pm for 4.15pm
 
Glamour Bar
 
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EDWARD DENISON
Luke Him Sau
Architect: China’s Missing Modern

In this talk, Edward Denison will examine China’s architectural encounters in the first half of the 20th-century through the lens of one of the country’s most distinguished yet overlooked practitioners: Luke Him Sau (Lu Qianshou, 1904–1991).
Luke is best known internationally and in China as the architect of the iconic Bank of China Headquarters in Shanghai. One of the first Chinese students to be trained at the Architectural Association in London in the late 1920s, Luke’s long, prolific and highly successful career in China and Hong Kong offers unique insights into an extraordinary period of Chinese political turbulence that scuppered the professional prospects and historical recognition of so many of his colleagues.
The story of Luke’s life begins with his childhood in colonial Hong Kong and his apprenticeship with a British architectural firm, before travelling to London to study at the prestigious Architectural Association (1927–30). In London, Luke was offered the post of Head of the Architecture Department at the newly established Bank of China and spent the next seven years in the inimitable city of Shanghai.
From his Shanghai base, he designed buildings all over China for the Bank and other clients before the Japanese invasion in 1937 forced him, and countless others, to flee to the proxy wartime capital of Chongqing. After the war he returned to Shanghai where he formed a partnership with four other Chinese graduates of UK universities; but civil war (between the Communists and Nationalists) once again caused him and others to uproot in 1949.
Initially intent on fleeing with the Nationalists to Taiwan, Luke was almost convinced to stay in Communist China by his friend and fellow architect, Liang Sicheng, but decided finally to move to Hong Kong. There, for the third time in his life, he had to establish his career all over again. Despite many challenges, he eventually prospered, becoming a pioneer in the design of private residences, schools, hospitals, chapels and public housing.
Edward Denison (architectural historian, writer and photographer) and Guang Yu Ren (architect, researcher and independent consultant) have nearly two decades of international professional experience in architecture and design. They have worked extensively in the UK, China and Africa and authored numerous books based on their projects. These include: Building Shanghai – The Story of China’s Gateway (John Wiley & Sons, 2006), Modernism in China – Architectural Visions and Revolutions (Wiley, 2008), The Life of the British Home – An Architectural History (Wiley, 2012) McMorran & Whitby (RIBA, 2009) and Asmara: Africa’s Secret Modernist City (Merrell, 2003). They are now based in London where Edward is a Research Associate and teaches architectural history and theory at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London (UCL) and is a teacher at New York University in London.
RSVP: to RAS Bookings at: bookings@royalasiaticsociety.org.cn
ENTRANCE:  75 RMB
Includes a glass of wine or soft drink
MEMBERSHIP applications and membership renewals will be available at this event.
WEBSITE:  www.royalasiaticsociety.org.cn

The Sea and Civilisation – The East Comes First

Posted: April 24th, 2014 | No Comments »

Lincoln Paine’s The Sea and Civilisation: A Maritime History of the World is a terrific and absorbing read. For the China Rhymer it’s fascinating largely in that so much of global maritime history is linked to China and the Far East. Europeans and Americans are of course newcomers to the oceans. Just to give a small offering of the many delicacies of the book it is worth remembering, as Paine points out, that the sea was how Islam reached Indonesia and South East Asia and that during the Liu Song dynasty Buddhism was brought to China partly by sea. At the time of Marco Polo Guangzhou was a far busier port than Alexandria, the Mediterranean’s major port at the time. And on and, fascinatingly, on….Of course many of us know all this, or most of it, but putting it altogether in one book and contrasting with the maritime exploits of everywhere else has significant merit.

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Lincoln Paine takes us back to the origins of long-distance migration by sea with our ancestors’ first forays from Africa and Eurasia to Australia and the Americas. He demonstrates the critical role of maritime trade to the civilizations of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, and the Indus Valley. He reacquaints us with the great seafaring cultures of antiquity like those of the Phoenicians and Greeks, as well as those of India, Southeast and East Asia who parlayed their navigational skills, shipbuilding techniques, and commercial acumen to establish vibrant overseas colonies and trade routes in the centuries leading up to the age of European overseas expansion. His narrative traces subsequent developments in commercial and naval shipping through the post-Cold War era. Above all, Paine makes clear how the rise and fall of civilizations can be traced to the sea.


Finding China’s past around us: Photographs and other legacies of two centuries of Anglo-Chinese relations – Robert Bickers – Museum of East Asian Art, Bath – 24/4/14

Posted: April 23rd, 2014 | No Comments »

Finding China’s past around us: Photographs and other legacies of two centuries of Anglo-Chinese relations

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Thursday 24 April, 18:30-19:30; Book by Wednesday 23 April

Admission: Friends and students £2.50; Public £5

Professor Robert Bickers (Professor of History, University of Bristol)

Scratch beneath the surface, or root around in the back of the cupboard, and you can often find in cities like Bath direct evidence of the long-intertwined histories of Britain and China. This talk will explore these, focusing on the rich archive of visual records of China’s modern history held in the UK.