Tuesday, May 28, 2013

News from The Atlantic

Screenshot The Atlantic


































Four days ago, the American magazine The Atlantic had a thought-provoking article about the economic, political and social pitfalls of China's breathtaking urbanization rates.

The Atlantic, by the way, is a wonderful news site providing informed analyses of the latest political, cultural and social developments around the globe. Its new China section is always worth a try if you are interested in all things Chinese. And its authors and correspondents (especially former Beijing bureau chief James Fallows) are well-informed and non-biased.

Schiavenza concludes his article:
'Will these moves work? This is the big question in China, and given how quickly things change in the country it'd be foolish making a prediction one way or another. But Li's apparent refusal of the NDRC urbanization proposal at least signals Beijing's unwillingness to plow forward with its usual spending binge and brings hope that the Xi Jinping administration may be more willing than its predecessor to launch needed reforms.'

Sunday, May 26, 2013

china beats presents :: China Smokes

You may have heard about it, seen it or even lived through it yourself. A lot of people in China still smoke. Unrelentingly and desperately so, sometimes. Despite all new regulations, fines or orders by city governments, the Chinese can be extremely stubborn if somebody tries to take away their most valued pleasures and habits.

What you may or may not know: there are also many talented young artists in nearly every corner of the Middle Kingdom. From the West to the East, the North to the deep South, China's cultural scenes are vivid and, depending on location, very progressive.

Guangzhou, the capital of Guangdong province, for example, is famous for its pulsating art and music scene. It encompasses breathtaking and internationally acclaimed performance and dance troupes, highly skilled photographers or widely respected art dealers. And it is also a hotbed of experimental musicians of nearly every denomination and origin.

Never heard rap by Chinese artists in Chinese language before?

Why don't you try this one for a start.

Saturday, May 25, 2013

New trends in internal migration

A group of migrant workers helping to rebuild Baiyu :: © Josh Chin / Flickr / CC BY-SA 2.0























When I flipped through some of the most interesting news aggregators on China a few days ago, I was struck by the headline of The Contemporary Gold that was circulated via Danwei.

In my former life as a 'serious' inhabitant of the academic ivory tower, I was kind of a specialist on internal and return migration in the PR China. And I never lost touch with recent developments in the fields of rural and urban development, general development issues, international and internal migration, gender and migration, and so on.

At the end of the 1980s, when the latest mass exodus from Chinese villages and backwater towns in Central and West China started, many Chinese and international experts predicted that this 'greatest human migration in world history' would ultimately lead to urban chaos, high crime rates, social disintegration, the development of abject urban slums and rising inequality between different regions and classes.

Developments that had already reached alarming levels in other developing nations, such as India, Bangladesh, South Asian, or African states.

Today, cities such as Rio de Janeiro, Mumbay, Dhaka or Kinshasa, South African townships or still-growing mega-cities such as Bangkok are notorious for unregulated growth, high crime rates and a general sense of despair among its thousands and thousands of new and old inhabitants. Mega-cities in the 21st century are often crowded, chaotic and rather terrifying on first sight.

The PR China, in contrast, has mastered this enormous task remarkably well. There are still many many problems, that's for sure. Urban China and rural China are still separated by the notorious 'Great Wall' of the peculiar Chinese household registration or hukou system.

Whole families are split between rural origins and urban destinations for years to come. Children are often left with grandparents or other relatives in nearly empty villages (kongke cun), because rural parents cannot afford to bring them along to their new abodes at the East Coast where they earn a living.

Inequality between different classes and regions, between Central China, West China and the East Coast, is rising again and the disintegration of the whole social fabric in villages and cities seems to be an inevitable consequence of this kind of massive human migration.

Nevertheless, even if the 'Great Wall' still divides rural and urban China, the notorious household registration or hukou system is still intact and historically inherited problems abound, neither did the CCP disintegrate nor did the Chinese state collapse. Nor is a real challenge to the ruling party-state from the bottom of society in sight.

Many prophets of doom may be surprised that the PR China is still standing and even stronger than before.

China has met the challenges posed by this massive human movement alternatively with 'hard strikes (yan da)' against rising crime, more liberal policies to attract rural talent to growing cities in the East and South, and new initiatives and detailed directives from the top in Zhongnanhai in Beijing via the various provincial and city governments, to the bottom of the rural administrative apparatus and the village cadres (ganbu).

The PR China's adaptability to ever-changing domestic and global trends, be it economic, social or cultural, is really astonishing at times.

Smaller Chinese cities, at least, are often much more liveable than their counterparts in other developing nations, such as India or Bangladesh, to name just a few. And perhaps much more interesting, chaotic (in a positive sense) than many so-called experts in the German and international mainstream media, the global academic world or international TV stations would have it.

For more information on recent trends in internal migration, migrant communities in urban China and gender issues, see the article 'Migrant workers forming “temporary couples" in the cities' by Danwei.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Are the censors really satisfied?

Screenshot Film Press Plus :: Vimeo

Jia Zhangke's 'A Touch of Sin (天注定 Tian zhu ding)' at the International Film Festival in Cannes

The film-maker presented his new work to a seemingly enthusiastic audience, and chances are that he will win one of the much sought-after trophies.

Renowned for his semi-documentary style, his new film 'A Touch of Sin (天注定 Tian zhu ding)' is (if you follow the rather raving reviews by national / international media) an acerbic attack on everything and everybody that is evil in contemporary China - corrupt local ganbu, ecological and human disasters, corruption at different levels of the party and / or state bureaucracy, and an ever-expanding entertainment industry that caters to the newly-rich and hopelessly spoiled as well as to the new / old underdogs.

The prototypical underdogs are the millions and millions of migrant workers who were and still are leaving rural backwaters and forgotten villages in search of the promised lands in the East and South.

Film aficionados might remember Jia Zhangke (贾樟柯) from the 1990s, when he was still a fresh face on the scene and a welcome guest at independent film festivals and in underground circles around the world.

According to the international press corps at Cannes, the film-maker repeatedly stated that he was not required to alter or cut any scenes from the material. And his production company plans to circulate copies widely in the PR China.

Ultimately, it remains to be seen if the new Chinese leadership under president Xi Jinping and premier Li Keqiang is as willing to fight endemic corruption as their predecessors Hu and Wen who had worked hard, sometimes at least, to eradicate one of the enduring evils in Chinese society.

If you are not too afraid of a little blood splatter (Tarantino-like) here and there, look out for 'A Touch of Sin' in your local cinema.

Intro

I was an avid reader of The China Beat from the start and I am much indebted to the masterminds behind it. Hope you don’t mind my borrowing parts of your name. Sorry to see you gone …

In a way, this blog is a deep bow to you and other like-minded souls - specialists on China that neither glorify nor condemn. In short - 'real' old China hands.

Over the years, I’ve learned a lot by reading your articles, books, blogs, news, reviews …

Thanks a lot. Xiexie nimen! Danke!

As a China scholar that has left the academic ivory tower years ago, I am trying to fill a void in the (German-speaking) world of new & old media where China is often either viewed as the new 'red peril' or 'the saviour of it all'.

Topics will cover modern Chinese society, politics, economics, (rural) development, gender politics, etc.

Guest authors are most welcome to share their views and perspectives, so please don’t hesitate to contact us.

Stay tuned for more.