Can the Chinese “other” become the Chinese “self”
It all started when we opened our front door and took a walk outside. We met with the other. Not just our neighbor, but the foreigner, the other language, the other culture. It was frightening, unknown. But we could make it less so by mashing its differences up and spitting them out into coherent paragraphs of our own language. Writing is a means of appropriation, and the amoung of material on the rising economic power of China is an indication of both how frightening and incomprehensible this “other” is to western society. From a bookshelf spanning One Billion Customers to China, the Gathering Threat, I picked out three slabs that grapple with the Middle Kingdom from different angles. The Politics of Piracy: Intellectual Property in Contemporary China zooms in on the solution to the paradise of 50 cent dvds. The Changing Face of China from Mao to Market plows through the country’s post-1949 laborious transition to capitalism. Foreign Babes in Beijing, like its title, is a sassier, more personnalized take on Beijing in the 1990s.
Generally speaking, the three books more or less successfully deal with the representation of Chinese culture. This representation is slightly lacking though, because it presupposes a distance. None of the three pieces completely slip into and render comprehensible the Chinese culture or mindset.
I very quickly regretted picking The Politics of Piracy for my reduced reading list. The book, is a dry albeit complete 200 pages of academic hammering. Its topic is presented with perfect essay decorum in the introductory chapter: “The question that guides this book is: What has been the impact of external pressure on China’s policymaking and implementation processes?”. Or more simply put, can the US stop Chinese street vendors from selling 50 cent pirated dvds of hollywood films? If I had opened the book before buying it, I would have realized that it answered none of my dreamed “why?” questions: why has the pirated dvd market flourished in China? Why are most of these pirated dvds Western films? Why is the Chinese population so thirsty for this Western entertainment? and even more wishful: Why do a large portion of these dvds not work?
Less academic, but still heavy on the convoluted sentence constructions is The Changing Face of China. It addresses the history of coexistence between the socialist government–the Chinese leaders are chosen by a political elite behind closed doors–and the capitalist economy–millionaire chinese business men roll around in chauffered limousines through Shanghai. In chronological order, it details–as in 10 pages of small print after every point made–the transition from a planned economy to capitalism and the reinterpretations of the socialist doctrines that accomodated this transition. At the end of the 1950s, during the establishment of communes, Mao ZeDong announced that a school textbook “cannot emphasize personal material interests, and lead people into the private pursuit of ‘a wife, a dacha, a car, a piano, and a TV set.’” After the privatization of most businesses and the eradication of fixed prices, chinese politician Zhang Zemin stated in 2001 “On the basis of economic growth, efforts should be made to increase income for urban and rural residents, constantly improve their living conditions, including food, clothing, housing, transport and daily necessities [...]When some people and some regions Get Rich First, others will be brought along”. To demonstrate this economic transition, author John Gittings goes heavy on the statistics and first hand accounts inn every level of society after 1949. A delightful abundance of contemporary literature and poetry excerpts punctuate an equal sized portion on the government’s failure to liberalize despite repeatedly crushed demonstrations of the student population.
John Gittings is adept at going into details and digging up the hidden side of the main Chinese disasters, the Great Leap Forward, the Cultural Revolution and the Tiananmen Square massacre. But beforehand, he does not describe the known side of these events. In the section on the Cultural Revolution, John Gittings zooms in on the ideological and political squirmishes between Mao ZeDong and his surrounding politicians, but fails to describe the actual events of the Revolution: its devastating effect on culture and on the Chinese population. Despite what one of the backcover’s blurbs states, The Changing Face of China is not the “best single volume history of the People’s Republic of China from 1949 to the present.” It is an incomplete historical account of modern China, better suited for scholars of the subject then newcomers.
Foreign Babes in Beijing pulls the curtain up on its author, freshly Columbia University graduated Rachel Dewoskin, taking her clothes off and poorly enacting inter-cultural sex for a Chinese soap opera. It is somewhat relieving that for the rest of the humorous work describing her immersion in Bejing from 1995 to 2000, Rachel Dewoskin often plunges under superficial differences of etiquette and language to scout out their historical origin. A description of Rachel Dewoskin’s soap opera character, Jiexi, refusing to bow in front of ancestral tablets in the soap script is followed by Dewoskin’s analysis “She follows the ugly ways of her predecessor, Lord Macartney, a British diplomat who famously did not get the kowtow idea and refused to bow to the Chinese emperor, stalling the advance of Sino-British trade for five decades and bringing on the Opium wars.” After a while though, the repeated pattern of show-not-tell examples + analysis + use of descriptive verbs reminds of a Columbia writing graduate who follows his courses’ curriculum to closely.
In addition to descriptions of ridiculous debates at her PR office, or embarassing dinners, Rachel Dewoskin gives us four “Biographies of Model Babes” (as the chapter headings run) emphasizing the variety and psychological complexity of the individuals she meets in China. Her Chinese office mate, Anna, engages in an illicit love affair with an Arab exchange student and routs for China’s first woman rock band, the Cobras. Kate is an American journalist in love with Chinese men. The author’s long term Chinese boyfriend Zhao Jun grapples with his violent past and the two artists Zhou Wen and Zhen Yi believe China should say no to the United States. It is only Rachel Dewoskin’s at times suffocating omnipresence that prevents us from entering more fully into the individuals she is describing.
Foreign Babes in Beijing, out of the three books, is the most successful at grasping Chinese culture. It attempts to understand the individuals that compose it. Of course, this raises questions about the best way to understand a foreign culture. Does culture reside in its individual’s mindsets? Can we understand another individual? Or does culture reside in the art and the history of a country? In that case, The Changing Face of China is a more satisfying read. That being said, understanding Chinese culture is necessary to avoid conflict as the economic dragon increasingly challenges the Western world’s hegemony. The two latter works can be commended for their efforts although many more need to be made before the Asian “other” becomes as comfortable a notion as the Western “self”.
So basically…none of these books are really worth reading. Interesting.
Anyways, I’ll be in NYC this week so it would be awesome if we could meet and go for lunch or coffee or a chocolate chip cookie. Send me an email if you can.
Julien
Nice review. Thanks. Foreign Babes in Beijing sounds like a bit of fun. Gittings is here in London, and I met him on a few occasions. A very nice man with a lot to say. I have a PhD student doing work on foreign media in China, and it looks like The Politics of Piracy might be the thing for him. Perhaps unfortunately.
Nice to see you back. Where have you been?
Nice to see you back. Where have you been?
Is this comment directed at me or at Anonymous Julien?
I think the comment is for me (referring to a previous comment) and I would like to extend my warm thanks to everyone that has commented on my blog, you don’t know how happy it makes me just to have other people read my stuff and think it’s worth commenting on.
Therefore, thanx so much estnyc for noticing that I had stopped writing on my blog, I was a bit sick recently and I also made a trip to LA, a sort of short, intense four day preparation to my new job as foreign promoter for a chinese movie company. So yep, i’ll be back in china next semester and definitely blogging a lot
Yes, Mark, sorry to say, that comment was for our hostess.
Hope you’re feeling better, Aventurina, and congrats on the new job. So you’ll be working and going to school?
Also, why is it when I click on your profile I see summaries of posts which don’t show up here?
a sort of short, intense four day preparation to my new job as foreign promoter for a chinese movie company.
Sounds exciting.
hmmm well i’ll be working next semester, but as I’ll be working in Beijing, I won’t be going to school (Hurray! just kidding)
I can’t answer you about the posts, I seem to be able to access all of them, hmmmmmmm
LA was ok, kind of stressful, more about adapting to a different culture and its work ethics then meeting american movie producers. good lesson though…..
I”m chinese,and my English is poor,it’’s hard for me to read that all you have write,you known,there really be
many words I have never meet in China.Can you tell me what’’s the meaning of PR.
Maybe my country China have a great develop in the past 20years,from a very very poor country (I think you
who grow up in a west country can”t believe, there are many people don;t have enouph food,and a very poor
living condition,and ……….,all of the country nearly a fragile.And turmoil.)to now ,at least ,most chinese people
now away from hungery.China have be a war place for nearly half a centry ,and many westen country take a lot of wealth from China, and the world war 2,and inter war,and many revolution by the eraly leaders,like Mao,as you said,it;s true that ,China is changing,and become more and more strong,but we chinese never think to invade any country even when we may be another super power in the world.because you known ,we
already have too much war,we just want to have a better life,and it;s also I think our goverment now do it’’s best on.Maybe the rise of China is a thread to some country, just as many westen scholar said ,but I just think they are be controled by their goverment or want to be different,you know ,now ,China is the hot point of
the world.
I think ,if you want to know more about China,the really China,just come here,but never to Shanghai and Beijing,I think for some aspects,It’’s not true.China is really much stronger ,but not so strong as you think, to Henan province ,or other province,they will tell you the true. We chinese just want a better life,and just so.And we really don”t like the presure that westen country impact on .
Some thing you talk about the privacy, I think it’’s just because we chinese just earn 120 dollars a month ,and the price is too high.
apologize for my English, I can”t convey my idea fully,just so.
hey ava. so any interest in the copy right and intellectual property stuff, or is it just the issue of piracy in china that interest you? there is a good book by Lawrence Lessig (known for http://www.creativecommons.org the copy left technique that is kinda viral in its uses) called Free Culture: How big media uses technology and the law to lock down culture and control creativity.
anyway, its an interesting issue, though i dont know if its the greatest break reading…
this feeling of other though that you talk about. i would love to follow your writing on it.
peace
b.
can i make friend with you??