Category: China
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Weekly Wanderings: October 1, 2023

No commentary and only a few recommendations from me today because for the past week I’ve been mostly occupied with preparing for and then attending the Midwest Conference on Asian Affairs. It’s been years since I’ve written and presented a conference paper based on original research, and happily I haven’t forgotten how to do so—but…
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Weekly Wanderings: September 24, 2023

Even as Twitter crumbles into irrelevancy, it remains populated enough to set one’s mentions aflame in reaction to a quick post—as David Brooks learned this week. But I was also reminded of this when on Friday I retweeted a photo from the Shanghai History Museum, tweeted by Lingnan University historian Peter Hamilton, and have spent…
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Weekly Wanderings: September 17, 2023

For all the talk of spring cleaning, mid-September is when I like to get organized. I’m full of back-to-school energy, determined to wrangle my to-do list into submission and read through the stack of library books I’ve renewed multiple times already. I’m doing some actual cleaning, too, filling a bag for Goodwill with t-shirts that…
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Weekly Wanderings: September 10, 2023

At the AAS #AsiaNow blog, I interviewed sociologist Bin Xu about his 2021 book, Chairman Mao’s Children: Generation and the Politics of Memory in China. In the later years of Mao’s rule, 17 million young Chinese were sent out of their urban homes to labor with and learn from rural peasants, in what was termed…
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Weekly Wanderings: August 27, 2023

I’m usually a fast reader, but I took my time last week with a collection of essays by historian and journalist Timothy Garton Ash. In Homelands: A Personal History of Europe, Garton Ash blends his firsthand observations of political movements in various European countries (mostly in the former Soviet bloc) with broader analysis of European…
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Weekly Wanderings: August 20, 2023

Following freelance journalist Jen A. Miller on Twitter (whatever, X) and Instagram led me to purchase a “Passport to Your National Parks®” a few weeks ago. Why? First of all, I love both notebooks AND checklists. More seriously, Miller’s posts made a convincing case that filling her book with passport stamps helped her expand the…
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Weekly Wanderings: August 13, 2023

My knowledge of U.S. Presidents in the late 19th century is … a little shaky. If pressed, I could probably name all of the men who came between Grant and McKinley; no promises I’d have them in the correct order, though. The single thing I previously knew about James A. Garfield was that he served…
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Weekly Wanderings: August 6, 2023

Just links this week—I’ve been in Philadelphia, visiting with family and friends, and am getting ready to head home to Ann Arbor. China StoriesKeith Bradsher, “Anger Builds in Towns Deliberately Flooded, in Part, to Save Beijing”Chang Minxiao and Fan Yiying, “In China’s Dance Schools, a Dangerous Obsession With Weight Loss”Kit Fan, “‘I don’t know if…
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Weekly Wanderings: July 30, 2023

In recent weeks I’ve driven round-trip from Ann Arbor to both Grand Rapids and Cleveland, and I’m currently in Pittsburgh en route to Philadelphia, so I’ve had lots of time to catch up on podcasts while behind the wheel. Here are some highlights of my playlist during these road trips: Drum Tower, “The Cage,” a…
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Weekly Wanderings: July 23, 2023

I’m in Cleveland this weekend, hiking the trails of Cuyahoga Valley National Park (ahhhh) and watching the Phillies lose 1-0 to the Guardians (agggghhhh). I can say with reasonable certainty that I haven’t spotted Chinese Foreign Minister and Xi Jinping protégé Qin Gang in Ohio—so that’s one place where he isn’t. But where is Qin…