Posted: June 5th, 2013 | No Comments »
Milk and dairy are risky options these days in Shanghai but, in the 1930s, half a century before the infant formula obsessions kicked in, Shanghai Dairy Farms seem to have done a good job. Their offices were in Hamilton House down on Kiangse Road (Jiangxi Road) but God knows where they kept the cows?

Posted: June 3rd, 2013 | 1 Comment »
A little obscure perhaps but Chen Shih-Wen’s Representation of China in British Children’s Fiction intrigued me….
In her exploration of China in British children’s literature, Shih-Wen Chen considers travelogue storybooks, historical novels, adventure stories and periodicals to demonstrate the diversity of images of China in the Victorian and Edwardian imagination. Her book provides a new context for understanding how China was constructed and sheds light on British cultural history and on the history and uses of children’s literature.
Shih-Wen Chen is a post-doctoral fellow at the Australian Centre on China in the World, The Australian National University. Her research interests include children’s literature, print culture, and histories of reading.
‘Shih-Wen Chen’s extraordinary research challenges the assertions made by previous scholars to construct an important and convincing new analysis of Chinese characters in British children’s fiction.’Sally Mitchell, Temple University, USA’Combining detailed historical context with close rhetorical analysis, Shih-Wen Chen brings out the subtle distinction and occluded histories that reveal the diverse and subtle ways images of China in the nineteenth century vary from the conventional reading of stereotype. Extensively researched, well argued, topical and expansive in its scope, her book provides a detailed and compelling case for the variegated lens British children’s fiction offers for viewing the complexities and nuances of Sino-British relations’.Helen Groth, University of New South Wales, Australia
Posted: June 2nd, 2013 | No Comments »
Posh frocks galore for Shanghai at Josephine Gowns on the Yuen Ming Yuen Road (now Yuan Ming Yuan Road). Obviously a showroom up on the 2nd floor run by Henry Cohen in the 1930s…

Posted: June 2nd, 2013 | No Comments »
Outdoor cinema has made something of a comeback in many cities around the world in recent years, but not in China to my knowledge. However, back in the thirties outdoor cinema was popular. In Shanghai there were weekend screening in Hongkew Park (now Lu Xun Park) as well as at the Hart Garden Lawn Cinema up on Hart Road (now Changde Road) close to the junction with Connaught Road (now Kanding Road). In 1934 the Hart Garden was actually showing 1932’s If I had a Million with an all-star cast. It seems like a pretty cheap date – 50 cents for the best seats. Just hope the rain stayed away….

Posted: June 2nd, 2013 | No Comments »
To my surprise the story of the magician Chung Ling Soo popped up on The One Show on BBC1, of all places. I’ve blogged about Chung Ling Soo, actually William Ellsworth Robinson, an American magician who worked mostly in Britain before the First World War impersonating a Chinese magician in full mandarin regalia. Most of the audience never had any idea that he wasn’t Chinese. There is little film of him – except this short clip of him welcoming back soldiers from the front to London (which I’ve blogged previously here). Famously Chung Ling Soo/Robinson died when his version of the bullet catching trick (set against a backdrop of the Boxer Rebellion!) went wrong at the Wood Green Empire music hall. By the way, there’s a great biography of Robinson called The Glorious Deception.
Anyway, if you can access BBCiPlayer before next Wednesday (5th June) you can watch the programme…

Posted: June 1st, 2013 | No Comments »
The British Library is currently running a good exhibition around the theme of propaganda. Obviously they have some great stuff from their collections. It runs till mid-September. The exhibition includes some items of interest to China Rhyming readers including some interesting prints from the Sino-Japanese War of 1895 with some battlefield scenes from Mizuno Toshikata and some images of Port Arthur Bay (now Lushun). There are also some particularly striking cartoons from the Russo-Japanese War (1905) showing the Japanese giving the Tsar’s army a bloody nose. There’s also quite a bit of Cultural Revolution stuff including stamps and the revolutionary opera, The White Haired Girl, which goes back further than the CR and was first performed as a piece of propaganda in 1945. Finally, I found the examples of early posters promoting the introduction of the One Child Policy from the 1970s quite interesting and hadn’t seen many of them before.

Posted: May 31st, 2013 | No Comments »
An interesting cover from the Thomas Cook’s guide to Peking, North China, South Manchuria and Korea from 1924 – it was a very popular guide (this is the fifth reprint) that was used by both foreigners living in China as well as by visiting tourists to the area. It came with three lovely maps as fold outs too – 1.) Railway and steamship connections North China-Chosen; 2.) Peking city map; 3.) Keijyo (seoul) & Ryuzan.

Posted: May 30th, 2013 | 1 Comment »
Just how worried should we be – The beautiful Cathay Cinema on Huai Hai Road (Avenue Joffre) has gone under wraps for a “makeover”. Personally, I’m very, very worried.
The Cathay was a masterpiece of art-deco in Shanghai designed by the Shanghai-based Starchitect CH Gonda and opened for business in 1932. The theatre has already been sub-divided into smaller screens and the place has been progressively less well looked after in recent years. We shall what is left when the “renovation” is complete.
These pictures from Shanghai Art Deco
(and, I hasten to add, anyone wishing to use any hastily snapped pictures from this site taken by me to highlight and draw attention to the continuing destruction of Shanghai’s architectural heritage or issues of preservation can feel free to use them wherever attention can be gained)



