Category: History
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Bookshelf: Red Memory
A rally at Tiananmen Square: Chairman Mao standing on the rostrum above, thousands of cheering participants below. A struggle session: the accused bent and bowed, surrounded by Red Guards screaming out their victim’s purported crimes. A loudspeaker, an orchestra, a chorus: incessant sources of “The East Is Red” and other songs lauding Mao and the…
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Weekly Wanderings: October 29, 2023

Former Chinese Premier Li Keqiang suffered a fatal heart attack late on Thursday night, passing away at the age of 68. An economist with a reputation for being something of a reformer (relatively speaking, for a senior Chinese Communist Party official), Li spent his decade as premier getting increasingly sidelined by Xi Jinping. As Xi…
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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: 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: July 16, 2023

Last weekend, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen traveled to China for a series of meetings. Among those Yellen talked with were a group of female economists and entrepreneurs, with whom she shared stories of being “almost the only woman in the room.” Unfortunately, the women who met with Yellen then became targets of an internet…
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Weekly Wanderings: June 10, 2023

The theme for this week’s collection of links is summer. Readers who follow me on Instagram have probably noticed that between April and October, most of my weekends involve 5K, 10K, and even half-marathon races. This is a relatively new activity of mine; as I wrote several years ago (in a post that still reliably…
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Weekly Wanderings: May 6, 2023

The ongoing decimation of Twitter coincides with my own desire to get back into a daily writing practice, so I’m reviving this blog. I’m making a minimal commitment here: a photo and short gloss on Mondays, and a “Weekly Wanderings” round-up of five stories/thoughts/recommendations each Saturday morning. If and as I can, I’ll post occasional…
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In Memoriam — But Not Yet

Six years ago, I spent the evening of June 4, 2014 in Hong Kong’s Victoria Park. Rain-heavy clouds had hovered over the city earlier in the day but then moved on without bursting; by the time I arrived at the park around dinnertime the night was clear, though muggy and hot, as is typical for…
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May Fourth at 100: A Reading Round-Up

On May 4, 1919, university students gathered in the center of Beijing to protest the Treaty of Versailles. China had sent 100,000 laborers to Europe in support of the Allies during World War I*, and many in the country had expected that in return the postwar negotiations would deliver German concessions on the Shandong Peninsula…