Posted: April 8th, 2013 | 1 Comment »
Anne Swain Goodrich’s The Peking Temple of the Eastern Peak is a charming description of Peking in 1927 (though this edition published later). Goodrich was a missionary in Peking. She had been born in China, and she returned after receiving her education in the United States, an education that included graduate work at Columbia University’s Teachers College. Her husband, L. Carrington Goodrich, eventually became chairman of the growing young Department of Chinese at Columbia University, which eventually became the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures.
Goodrich was a great collector of paper gods and created one of the finest collections in the West, most purchased from the famous Peking curio store Ren he zhi dian (Unity Among Men Paper Shop). This book is actually one of a three-volume collection she completed after leaving China – the paper gods collection is now part of the CV Starr East Asian Library at Columbia.

Posted: April 7th, 2013 | No Comments »
Applications are open again for the M Writer’s Residencies….

M Writer’s Residencies 2014-15
The M Literary Residencies have been established to disseminate a broader knowledge of contemporary life and writing in India and China today and to foster deeper intellectual, cultural and artistic links across individuals and communities.
Applications for 2014-15
Applications for the 2014-15 M Literary Residencies are now open and close on June 1 2013.
For application forms, click here.
For guidelines, click here.
Updates are available here and on our Facebook page. Results will be announced on October 15 2013.
Listen: Interview with Michelle Garnaut on M Literary Residency
Listen to an interview with Michelle Garnaut, CEO of M Restaurant Group, discussing the M Literary Residency and the M Restaurants on Hong Kong’s local radio station RTHK 3 (25 May, 2012), click here
The M Literary Residency
M Literary Residency Recipients for 2013-2014
The M Literary Residency is delighted to announce the recipients for the 2013-2014 Residency programs in China and India. Madeleine Thien has been selected for the China Residency, based in Shanghai, while Glenn Diaz  won the India Residency, based at Sangam House, outside of Bangalore.
Posted: April 7th, 2013 | No Comments »
A little diversion from the usual China history – my continuing series for Zed Books in London, Asian Arguments, has a new book out this April, China and the Environment, and I’m very pleased as it’s one that I envisaged publishing right back at the start of the series. I’ve admired the work Isabel Hilton, Sam Geall and the London and Beijing team at Chinadialogue have done for a long time and thought it would be great to get them to assemble a series of case studies that both showed the excellence of the repoirting and commentary they undertake on their website as well as emphasizing the main theme of the Asian Arguments series, which is to look at complex issues in Asia from the ground up rather than the more common 3,000 feet down viewpoint.
I think China and the Environment: the Green Revolution does exactly that with an Introduction on The return of Chinese civil society from Isabel Hilton and a series of essays
including on China’s environmental journalists by Sam Geall; The birth of Chinese environmentalism by Olivia Boyd; The Yangzonghai case and the struggle for environmental justice by Adam Moser; the case of Xiamen PX by Jonathan Ansfield (now of The New York Times) and Defending Tiger Leaping Gorge by one of China’s preeminent and pioneering green activists Liu Jianqiang.

The book is being launch in London on April 11 with a round table discussion….details below and ore details of how to book etc here
China and the Environment: The Green Revolution
Thu 11 Apr 2013, 6:00pm
Free Word Lecture Theatre
60 Farringdon Road
London EC1R 3GA
Telephone: 020 7324 2570
Fax: 020 7490 0566
info@freewordonline.com
Chinadialogue and Zed Books invite you to join the launch event for China and the Environment: The Green Revolution.
Edited by Sam Geall, Executive Editor of bilingual environmental website chinadialogue, and with an introduction by Isabel Hilton, China and the Environment provides a unique report on the experiences of citizens responding to environmental problems in contemporary China.
Isabel Hilton, Editor and CEO of chinadialogue, will chair a discussion about China’s ecological crisis and the role of civil society in addressing environmental problems. The panel includes:
Book launch begins at 6pm. Panel discussion and Q&A from 6:30-7.45pm. Drinks from 7.45-9.00pm
Advance praise for China and the Environment:
`This superb collection of vivid case studies gives plenty of evidence that Chinese citizens across the country are not going to sit down and do nothing while pollution slowly kills them. With detailed accounts of resistance against polluting corporations and colluding officials, this is an authentic and credible report from the great battleground of modern Chinese environmentalism – a battle over not just China’s air, but the air of the rest of the planet.’ – Kerry Brown, Professor and Director, China Studies Centre, University of Sydney
‘This is a superb and engaging book that explains how China is grappling with one of the most pressing issues facing our world today. In compelling fashion, the authors introduce us to the activists, journalists and lawyers who are fighting for cleaner air and water, and to the institutional obstacles that remain in their path. This is a must-read for anyone who has heard about an environmental protest in China and wondered not only what the real story behind it was, but also which way the story of China’s ‘green revolution’ is heading.’ – Gady Epstein, China correspondent, The Economist
Posted: April 7th, 2013 | No Comments »
Recently I was at the Adelaide Writers’ Week and had the opportunity to interview the biographer Anne de Courcy about her fascinating her new book The Fishing Fleet: Husband Hunting in the Raj. The Australian Monthly and Slow TV videoed the session on a very hot Adelaide March day and you can view it here….

Posted: April 6th, 2013 | No Comments »
Those of you who follow the sillier proclamations of the Chinese Communist Party will know that a while back they banned time travel. This does seem rather churlish, but no TV programmes involving time travel are allowed – and no imports of Dr Who, Life on Mars etc etc. Alternative realities and histories are not to be contemplated. What on earth are they afraid of (as if I didn’t know). Of course alternative history is all the rage elsewhere – British readers have been fascinatingly gobbling up alternative histories of Britain imagining having lost the war (see Peter Millar’s The Shameful Suicide of Winston Churchill or CJ Samson’s Dominion for example). The British state has not collapsed despite publication of these books and a new series of Dr Who!
Personally I like a bit of time travel. Interesting then that a good friend, Matt Forney, happened to be wandering around the old Fox Tower in Beijing recently (Dongbienmen) which of course has a central role in my Midnight in Peking in 1937. Matt took a close look at the supposedly old graffiti on the tower’s walls that is said to have been left by soldiers, Russians mostly, of the Eight Power Allied Army that stormed Peking, finished off the Boxers and then proceeded to loot the place. Some of the scratched names look a bit fresh and more recent which has called the whole 1900 graffiti concept into question but anyway…What should he find? Perhaps a bit of time travel is possible….

Posted: April 5th, 2013 | No Comments »
Somehow, along the way, as the world lost class, smokers started just leaving their fags in the packs. Of course back in the 1930s no self respecting smoker would have been without a rather nice cigarette case – Shanghailanders of course included. Where did they get them? Alexander Clark’s at Sassoon House at No.20 the Bund (basically the shopping arcade at the base of the Cathay Hotel) was one place….

Posted: April 5th, 2013 | No Comments »
Obviously, I think this an excellent choice for any book club…
RAS SHANGHAI BOOK CLUB
Saturday 6th April 2013 at 4:00 pm
T8 Restaurant
Xintiandi, North Block, Lane 181 Taicang Lu, near Madang Lu, 2/F
太仓路181å·, 新天地北里, 近马当路
 This is a special RAS Book Club Event-
PAUL FRENCH will discuss his new book:
  The Badlands: Decadent Playground of Old Peking
Published by: Penguin, 7 Jan 2013, 84 pages

BADLANDS is an evocative account by Paul French, author of the acclaimed Midnight in Peking, of the infamous nightlife district of pre-communist Beijing.
Through portraits of eight White Russians, Americans and Europeans who lived and worked in the Badlands in the 1920s and ’30s, Paul French brings the area and its era vividly to life. A small warren of narrow hutongs, the Badlands sat just inside the eastern flank of the Tartar Wall, which at that time enclosed the old Imperial City of Peking.
The Badland’s habitués were a mix of the good, the bad and the poor unfortunates, among them the fiery brothel madams Brana Shazker and Rosie Gerbert; the pimp Saxsen, who had no regard for the women he exploited; the young prostitutes Marie and Peggy, whose dreadful working lives drove them into separate pits of madness and addiction. There was the cabaret dancer Tatiana Korovina, a White Russian girl who did not succumb to the vice of the district but instead married, had a family, and eventually left China to lead a long and happy life. There was the American Joe Knauf, who dealt violence and fear as well as drugs, and finally the enigmatic Shura Giraldi, of indeterminate sex, who was to some a charmer and to others a master criminal, but to everyone the uncrowned King of the Badlands.
In depicting this colourful cast of characters, Paul French was assisted by readers of the extraordinary Midnight in Peking, who contacted him from around the globe. As the family and acquaintances of people he’d written about in that book, they had stories and recollections to add to French’s own research. The result is a short but potent account of a time and a place until now largely forgotten, but here rendered unforgettable.
Born in London and educated there and in Glasgow, Paul French has lived and worked in Shanghai for many years. He is a widely published analyst and commentator on China and has written a number of books, including a history of foreign correspondents in China and a biography of the legendary Shanghai adman, journalist and adventurer Carl Crow.
His book Midnight in Peking was a New York Times Bestseller, a BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week, and will be made into an international miniseries by Kudos Film and Television, the UK creators of Spooks and Life on Mars.
Copies of the book will be for sale and signed by the author on request
Entrance: RMBÂ 100 (RAS Members) and RMB 150 (non-members) including a drink (tea, coffee, soft drink, or glass of wine). Those unable to make the donation but wishing to attend may contact us for exemption prior to this RAS Book Club event.
Membership applications and membership renewals will be available at this event.
RSVP: bookclub@royalasiaticsociety.org.cn
N.B. RESERVATIONS ESSENTIAL AS SPACE IS LIMITED AT THIS EVENT!
Posted: April 4th, 2013 | No Comments »
Only a few days left to catch this exhibition in Beijing I’m afraid (I really must sharpen my pencil in terms of giving more notice of things!!). There is a display of interesting photos display at the J.W. Marriott in Beijing, organised by the British Embassy.The exhibition, ‘Picturing China 1870-1950: Photographs from British collections’, or until 7th April.
More here from the Visualising China blog
For those interested in China photography and archiving Robert Bickers, the man behind the Visualising China project is speaking at the Translating China: Britain in China – Archiving conference on April 27th at the University of Westminster.
