Archive for the 'History' Category

top google video: sensationalist “Rape of Nanking”

Jay Dautcher alerted me to the current number one video on Google Video.  It’s been seen over 280,000 times, almost 100,000 of those in the last 24 hours.  It’s a 77 minute video called The Rape of Nanking (Nightmare in Nanking), originally produced in English by a Dr. Rhawn Joseph and his Brainmind organization, and now voiced over in Mandarin. Dr. Joseph seems to have a fascination with the strange and macabre, and has produced such bizarre "classics" as Hitler’s Diaries, the Face and Pyramids of Mars, Alpha and Omega Antichrist, and a series of Brain Mind lectures.  You can find the English version of Nanking Nightmare in several parts on Youtube, where it has been viewed 135,000 times in the last 3 months.  The promo for the video has quotes such as this:

We had fun killing Chinese. We
caught some innocent Chinese and either buried them alive, or pushed
them into a fire, or beat them to death with clubs. When they were half
dead we pushed them into ditches and burned them, torturing them to
death. Everyone gets his entertainment this way. Its like killing dogs
and cats." –Asahi Shimbun, Japanese soldier, describing Japanese
atrocities during the Rape of Nanking.

This year is the 70th anniversary of the massacre. A quick Baidu search turns up a groundswell of attention in the last week or so for the film.  For instance, China Youth Daily editor Qiu Haiping wrote an impassioned post on his blog on Feb 22, rallying Chinese viewers to see the film and to show it to their children as well. It was immediately reposted at forums, such as here at Tianya on the same day. Some comments on the Tianya repost:

The Americans see Sino-Japanese relations warming up
so they deliberately put out this film. Bush says to Japan,
look, you’ve got so much hatred with China,
China is not going to let it go.  Just be good and let me piss on you.
That evil American government, there’s nothing they won’t think of.

The best teacher for Chinese youth’s anti-Japanese education is Japan itself! The Chinese government has actually been suppressing anti-Japanese sentiment inside China. In 2005, the explosion of anti-Japanese demonstrations was led by the Internet’s development in China.  Thanks to the Internet, which has allowed us to understand more truths, and led us to throw away those ridiculous fantasies!

Actually, those Chinese who are familiar with the Japanese atrocities all hold a strong desire for revenge, and hope that China will punish Japan for it one day. Many Chinese don’t want to see any more propaganda from Chinese officials about "Sino-Japanese friendship."  We are looking for an excuse for the second Sino-Japanese war.  The short-sightedness, bullying and shameless nature of the Japanese are an opportunity for Chinese to get revenge!…

Watch this movie not to make us remember hate, not to make us take revenge, but to make us study history, so that both countries can peacefully coexist.

No matter what the U.S. does, they’re still different from Japan because they are still human.  The Japanese will always be beasts.

How To Shoot an Airplane

20061205_hitairplane

Scans of a pamphlet dated 1965, titled 怎样打飞机 ("How to Shoot an Airplane").

Link to original post on 白板报, with scans of instruction manual. Via PostShow.

From the BBS: 50 photos, 50 years of peasant life

A tour of 50 photos that "testify to the real life of the peasants over the last 50 years" has been put together by a blogger and reposted on Tianya BBS.  It’s got many great pictures, though unfortunately there are no specific dates or origins on them.  For instance:

Members of a people’s commune put on Mao buttons together

Mao_pins

Families in a people’s commune eating in communal dining hall

Great_leap_forward

Pool tables in a field: "I used to play when I was little," writes the author.  "It was 50 cents a game."

Pool_tables

virtual tomb tours

Spend some time wandering around among the spectacular maps, objects, and Flash video tours of recently excavated materials from the Liao empire (907-1125), online at the Asia Society.  The "Selected Liao Dynasty Sites" section shows you where some of the actual sites are located, ranging across northeastern China, from Liaoning to Hebei.  "Virtual Tours of Liao Tombs" provides a 360 degree turn around the brightly painted walls of several different tombs.  It’s another piece in the complex history puzzle of central Asian and Chinese cultural exchange, religious beliefs, and trade — a history sure to become increasingly important over the next few decades, as both central Asia and China move back into central geopolitical significance. 

But all of that aside, these are simply gorgeous pieces. 

Liao_tombs

(via The Asian Studies WWW Monitor)

Lu Xun 鲁迅 in Virtual China: 70th anniversary of his death

Lu Xun is revered in China as the father of modern Chinese
literature, and was similar to Mark Twain in his ability to skewer the
morals and politics of the day (early 20th century China) through devilishly drawn characters, satire, and
brilliant language.  A few of those characters, Ah Q in particular, have endured through the last 70 years of change and remain common referents for Chinese people. October 19th was the 70th anniversary of his death in 1936, and there are some interesting sites to visit in Virtual China.  Sina’s Lu Xun commemoration site goes over his life history and provides links to some of his stories and essays (in Chinese; see English links below), selections of which have been posted in full on Sina’s Literature BBS.

Luxun

"How Far Have we Gotten from Lu Xun?"
is a 70th Anniversary Sina website/blog that tries to open up conversation on what the
famous author’s work means in contemporary China. This website includes sections on "Does Lu Xun
Still have Value Today," "The Real Lu Xun and his Critics," and "Lu Xun in the People’s Eyes" — each section has links to blog posts.  As the site notes in its editorial:  As for whether he’s
outdated or not, the debates fly every few years, something which can
only happen with a timeless author.  Actually, he’s already very, very
close to us. 

The comments on the blog, in response to the opening editorial, range from pride in Lu’’s body of work, to ironic consideration of where Lu Xun would be if he were writing today [rough translations]: 

Compared with today, Lu Xun’s era was one of free speech.

In the busy, rushing forests of today’s cities…people have lost too much, been numb for too long…"A Call to Arms"《呐喊》[his anthology published in 1923] in
this era that lacks a "call to arms", when our cities are getting more
and more sophisticated, our lives are getting fuller, our
"life paths" are broadening…and the look in our eyes is ever more mixed up, pompous, and sad. After 70 years, "A Call to Arms"
wakes me up…

If you
haven’t read Lu Xun, you should. You’ll understand why the characters of Ah Q and Kong
Yiji continue to make sense today.  They’re extraordinary for the non-Chinese speaker when read in Chinese.  In English, the Lu Xun Reference Archive, (part of the Marxists Internet Archive), has links to all of the pieces in the volume Selected Stories of Lu Hsun,
published by Foreign Languages Press, Peking, 1960, 1972.  I am no Lu
Xun expert, but if you haven’t read any you might start with The True Story of Ah Q, then move on to Kong Yiji, Medicine, and SoapDiary of a Madman, his earliest published story, is famous for its use of the metaphor of cannibalism to describe Chinese social relations.

(via Icebin’s blog)

source of sources: Modern Chinese Literature and Culture Resource Center

There are lots of sites that aggregate other sites online, whether it be blog aggregators or news aggregators, but this one is worth browsing.  You’ll learn something.  You’ll find something new.

It’s the MCLC Resource Center, "maintained by Kirk A. Denton at the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures, The Ohio State University, in conjunction with the journal Modern Chinese Literature and Culture,"

In particular, you’ll love the General Online Resources section. There you’ll find links to Chinese search engines and portals, BBS Forums such as Strengthening the Nation (ch) and the Chinese Forums aggregator (ch), print and e-zines such as the People’s Liberation Army Pictorial (ch) and the Far Eastern Economic Review (en)(which I thought was gone…?) and Modern Chinese Literature sites such as the China poetry section (en) of the Poetry International website–among many, many others. 

Google Books + Chinese materials

K.M. Lawson at the multi-author China history blog Frog in a Well, provides a detailed tutorial on how to use Google Books to find open source historical material about China, and how to download texts in pdf format. Google Books allows you to do full-text searches of the books that are indexed already by Google, and apparently, to download some of those texts as well. 

Some examples of books that can be downloaded completely, just by searching for those with China in the title:
Odes to Kien Long: The Present Emperor of China; with The Quakers, a Tale; To a Fly, Drowned in a…
By Peter Pindar 1792

A Wayfarer in China: Impressions of a Trip Across West China and Mongolia
By Elizabeth Kimball Kendall 1913

The People of China: Their Country, History, Life, Ideas, and Relations with the Foreigner
By J. W. (John William) Robertson Scott 1900

Opium-smoking in America and China
By H. H. (Harry Hubbell) Kane 1882

understanding Chinese nationalism online: the telegraph and the internet

If you read one book about the Chinese Internet this year (and, yes, there aren’t very many are there?), let it be Historicizing Online Politics: Telegraphy, the Internet, and Political Participation in China, by U. Wisconsin Madison’s anthropology professor Zhou Yongming (Stanford Press, 2006). The book is actually a good read–not always the case for an academic monograph–and juxtaposes the development and role of telegraphy in the late 1800s with the development and role of the Internet in the past two decades in China. Zhou concludes that Chinese nationalism, the relationship between China and the outside world, and domestic politics are the real drivers of inventive uses of both technologies–not the other way around.

I would not skip the first two-thirds of the book, which detail the history of the telegraph through delightful descriptions of local elites and their disagreements with the Qing rulers in the north, the suspicious view of the Qing government towards the new technology, and the use of the telegraph as a tool for an unprecedented, widespread, rapid dissemination of a genre of political speech known as the "circular telegram."

But if you’re pressed for time or not interested in history or not interested in reading whole books, you can focus on the last third of the book, which provides a nuanced view of various forms of "political participation" on the Chinese Internet in the past two decades. Zhou provides superb analysis of how the Chinese government has welcomed the Internet while at the same time regulating it as heavily as it can, not least through self-censorship by online writers. What I especially love about the Internet work is that Zhou takes a nice, long look at the people and ideas behind a number of important early websites, blogs, and BBS forums dealing with politics, some of which are ongoing such as V-War Forum 铁血社区 and the People’s Daily’s Strengthening China Forum 强国论坛 and others of which have been shut down such as, Michael Anti or recently, Century China Salon.  A few of the key ideas from the book’s conclusion:

…the Chinese state has had to open up some online space to newly emerged netizens, while employing online tools to confront those who might use it for political purposes that go against its interests. In the meantime, Chinese intellectuals, marginalized minjian writers, and niche Internet surfers like the military fan groups have all made efforts to expand political participation, in which they have succeeded to a certain degree, especially in their own websites and BBS forums.  Yet so far, the Internet has not been as influential and effective in shaping the public sphere as the circular telegram was a century ago (p. 234).

…the position of Chinese nationalists online is not explained by theorizing that they have been misled by the Chinese state and consequently do not "get it right." Rather, they are in fact well informed through the Internet and other media, but are responding in ways that are not congruent with the expected changes the information is supposed to exert upon its receivers, that is, by becoming pro-democratic opponents of the current regime (p. 239). 

Zhou’s latest article appears in June 2006 issue of Chinese University of Hong Kong’s Twenty-First Century Review (二十一世纪, in Chinese), with two other articles under the heading of Freedom of the Press and Access to Information on the Internet.  Zhou’s article is: "The Privatization of Regulation and the Reception Context of Internet Information," which looks to be a more updated discussion of some of the changes since research for the book discussed above was done in the early 2000s.