Posted: June 30th, 2012 | No Comments »
Given my recent comments on dragon ladies (see Foreign Policy article here) I thought perhaps a little biography of Dragon Lady-related books was in order – not exhaustive and do feel free to add…
The Asian Mystique: Dragon Ladies, Geisha Girls and the Fantasies of the Exotic Orient – Sheridan Prasso
Dragon Lady: The Life and Legend of the Last Empress of China – Sterling Seagrave
The Dragon Empress – Marina Warner
Decadence Mandchoue – Edmund Backhouse
China Under the Empress Dowager – Edmund Backhouse & JOP Bland
The Last Empress – Anchee Min
The Last Empress: Madame Chiang Kai-shek and the Birth of Modern China – Hannah Pakkula
Madame Chiang Kai-shek: China’s Eternal First Lady – Laura Tyson-Li
Madame Mao: The White Boned Devil – Ross Terrill

Madame vamping Truman in her white gloves and trademark qipao
Posted: June 29th, 2012 | No Comments »
As I’m on about the various Chinese bits and pieces of interest in the Museum of London then, though I’m a couple of months late, I have to note this great illustration of the Chinese community celebrating tomb sweeping day (qingming) in London. The illustration below is from the Illustrated London News for April 24th 1909. It shows Chinese in England attending to graves in the “East London Cemetery” (which is still in use out in Plaistow). The Chinese gravestones are interesting (not sure if any are still there? – I’ve never been over to Plaistow, the esteemed ancestors of the French family are all gathered either in North London “crems” or long gone Whitechapel graveyards) and suckling pig is elaborate as well as whisky. The illustration seems to indicate that the curious English found this interesting. The Chinese mens costumes of labouring jackets and flat caps seem accurate from pictures of Limehouse at the time. More details here.

Posted: June 29th, 2012 | No Comments »
I’ll just a list of UK media reviews up for the record and in case anyone’s interested.
Of course The Economist is a biggie
The Scotsman went on at great length and very nicely too
The Sunday Express liked the writing as well as the story, so no complaints this end
The Daily Telegraph was fine too
The Spectator (who like everyone has used the picture of Pamela which is nice to see everywhere)
The Financial Times were great too
Scotland on Sunday was fine as well
and then finally the Guardian reviewed too…
And here’s WH Smith’s at Heathrow where the Queen still rises above me!!

Posted: June 28th, 2012 | No Comments »
Perhaps not the most gripping and scintillating read of the year but perhaps useful for background research…
Gavin Ure
Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Studies Series

This book explores the making of public policy for Hong Kong between 1918 and 1958. During much of this period, the Hong Kong government had limited policymaking capabilities. Many new policies followed initiatives either from the Colonial Office or from politicians in Hong Kong. This book examines the balance of political power influencing how such decisions were reached and who wielded the most influence—the Hong Kong or British governments or the politicians. Gradually, the Hong Kong government, through implementing new policies, improved its own policy-making capabilities and gained the ability to exercise greater autonomy.The policy areas covered by this book include the implementation of rent controls in 1922, the management of Hong Kong’s currency from 1929 to 1936, the resolution of the financial dispute over matters arising from World War II, the origins of Hong Kong’s public housing and permanent squatter resettlement policies, negotiations over Hong Kong’s contribution to its defence costs and the background to the granting of formal financial autonomy in 1958.
Governors, Politics and the Colonial Office will be of interest to historians and political scientists, and to anyone with a general interest in the social, economic and political development of Hong Kong.
Gavin Ure is a former Administrative Officer with the Hong Kong government. He is now Adjunct Associate Professor in the Department of Applied Social Science at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
“In this meticulously researched book, based on archival sources, Gavin Ure explores the important issue of how Hong Kong’s colonial rulers made public policy. Through a careful examination of key political, economic and social questions, he shows how local administrators were able to wrest autonomy from the British government and to run the colony on their own terms. The book is essential reading for anyone interested in Hong Kong’s history and the policies that have shaped the modern city.” — Ian Scott, author of The Public Sector in Hong Kong
“Who governs Colonial Hong Kong—London or the officials sent from Britain? The issue of autonomy is central to our understanding of politics and policymaking in Hong Kong during the colonial era. From a unique perspective, both as an academic and former senior civil servant, Gavin Ure demonstrates how Hong Kong gradually gained control of key areas of public policy. This book is an essential read for anyone with an interest in politics and public policy in Hong Kong.” — James Lee, Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Posted: June 28th, 2012 | 1 Comment »
…a piece I did for Foreign Policy on dragon ladies that was fun. And, just before everyone piles in, I am aware that “dragon lady” was originally a western construct (I almost sound like an academic there!) going back to the Terry and the Pirates comic strip and Yellow Peril novels. However, it is interesting that it is also now used in China pretty widely. Anyway, here’s my quick summary in the word count allowed…a dash though an empress, an empress dowager, Madame’s Chiang, Mao and others right up to Madame Gu!
the Empress Wu – trashed by the Confucians!
Dowager Empress Ci Xi – poisoned cakes to take over
Bad girl, bad dad…
Madame Chiang – who even vamped Churchill!
Madame Mao – not a lot of redeeming features here I’m afraid
Madame Gu – a dragon lady for the 21st century?
Posted: June 27th, 2012 | No Comments »
A quick post to link to a paper given by Ho Yin Lee (Programme Director, Architectural Conservation Programme at The University of Hong Kong) and Lynne DiStefano of HKU’s Architecture Department on conservation in Hong Kong. It was presented as part of the LSE Cities Conference. Some interesting stuff – here’s a paragraph…I really wish I had time to do the course in conservation!!

For the authors, as faculty members of China’s first and only master degree level academic programme in conservation – the Architectural Conservation Programme at the University of Hong Kong – we are pleased to see that built-heritage conservation is no longer considered an obscure branch of studies lumped together with museums and antiquities. What the programme has been advocating, that urban conservation should be an essential component of the sustainable development of Hong Kong as a city, has finally been given its due recognition. Many of the principles and ideas taught and advocated in the programme have become widely discussed not only in academic circles but also by the public through the mass media. When the programme was first established in 2000, the common reaction was, ‘What’s there to conserve in Hong Kong?’. Now, the common response is, ‘There is so much we need to conserve in Hong Kong, and we’re not doing enough’. For the loss of the Star Ferry Pier and Clock Tower, Hong Kong has gained one small step in the sustainable development of the city, and a significant step in the continual effort for better urban conservation and improved quality of life.
Posted: June 26th, 2012 | No Comments »
These conferences have been really great so far, organised by Anne Witchard at the University of Westminster and with funding from the AHRC. I would plug that there is also now a twitter feed (@chinamyths) that gives a lot of good links to things China in Britain and the sort of interests these conferences explore. This event will have some performances I think including David Yip (who I grew up watching in The Chinese Detective) and the rather wild Anna Chen – Madame Miaow!
China in Britain: Myths and Realities
Theatre/Performance and Music
July 18th 2012 – Time 9:45:AM – 5:30PM
The Old Cinema, University of Westminster, 309 Regent Street, London W1B 2UW
Entrance – including lunch and refreshments – is free of charge so
for catering purposes it is essential to book your place by emailing
anne@translatingchina.info
Twitter: @chinamyths

The day will present an eclectic programme with presentations from actors and broadcasters and equally exciting academics (!) Dongshin Chang (City University of New York), Diana Yeh (Birkbeck College and University of East London), Simon Sladen (University of Winchester) and Ashley Thorpe (University of Reading) will present research that restores the history of China and Chineseness to the English stage – from Regency Extravaganzas, such as Chinese Sorcerer to chinoiserie theatre in the 1930s and Lady Precious Stream. We will look at subversive pantomime in Thatcher’s Britain, Poppy, and more recently Anna Chen’s Steampunk Opium Wars and Damon Albarn’s opera Monkey: Journey to the West.
The UK’s most high profile British Chinese actor, David Yip, remembered by many for his role as Detective Sergeant John Ho in The Chinese Detective will be talking about his new multimedia show Gold Mountain. There will be performances from comedienne, poet and political pundit, Anna Chen (aka Madame Miaow), actor David Lee-Jones, currently the lead in Richard III – the first British Chinese actor to be cast as one of Shakespeare’s English Kings – and Resonance Radio’s Lucky Cat DJ, Zoe Baxter, playing Korean Punk, Chinese Hip Hop and Reggae, Japanese Ska, Thai Country, and Singapore 60’s pop.
PS: This is also a great opportunity to the University of Westminster’s Old Cinema which has the proud claim of being the birthplace of British cinema. Here, in 1896, the Lumière brothers put on the first public show of moving pictures in this country. Now a space of fascinating historical interest, the Regent Street Old Cinema has retained its stage, decorative gilding, barrel vaulted ceiling and boasts a working 1936 Compton organ. A refurbishment campaign is underway to restore the theatre to its original Victorian glory. http://www.birthplaceofcinema.com/
Posted: June 26th, 2012 | 1 Comment »
And here’s some non-fiction and biography worth the effort…

The West End Front: The Wartime Secrets of London’s Grand Hotels – Matthew Sweet – every so often a book comes along that you really, really wish you’d had the idea for and gone and done. This is one such. The sheer delight that Sweet must have had in digging up these stories of spies, intrigue, strikes, characters, scandals, con-men, con-women, deposed royals, odd foreigners and debauched all sorts comes shining through. A great read.
In the Garden of Beasts: Love and Terror in Hitler’s Berlin – Erik Larson – Larson rarely disappoints to be honest and this is a great story of the American Embassy in Berlin, the Ambasador and his family during Hitler’s rise to power. How we misread the Nazis too often, how Hitler and his cohorts could hide, dissemble and cajole, how the power and strength of the Nazis could, in 1933, still win over people with its brazenness and seeming renewal of an old and corrupt Europe. We read from hindsight of course, a gift denied the inhabitants of the tale, but still we are thrilled by their realisation of the wonderland cum nightmare they have wandered into. Larson’s now standards ability to bounce around the story and the milieu, the macro and the micro is always enjoyable an page turning.
Darkmarket: Cyberthieves, Cybercops and You – Misha Glenny – the follow up to the great McMafia. But see the thing is geeks and keyboards is only thrilling to geek who like keyboards – the sort of people who like video games and movies like The Net. Normal people find this stuff functional but boring. So Glenny breaks the story down into bite sized chunks and turns it into a Mission Impossible thriller (without the little American bloke with the weird beliefs)B flying around from Silicon Valley to Washington, Mi6 to the FBI, Odessa to, eerr, Scunthorpe! And then it works because just as your eyes start to glaze over with the techie details (which are important and scary for all of us who online bank, ATM etc etc) you’re back in a dingy Odessa basement or a Scotland Yard briefing and pumped again.

Lisbon: War in the Shadows of the City of Light, 1939-1945 – Neill Lochery – few cities (with the exception of Shanghai) are more fascinating in WW2 than Lisbon (see Robert Wilson’s great Lisbon spy thrillers) – even Casablanca. Lochery’s book is a good overview of how Salazar maintained neutrality, the spy wars between the British and Nazis, the plight of the refugees crowding into the city, the deals fone over the strategically crucial Azores and the ethical problems Salazar and Portugal faced over the Wolfram for Nazi gold deals. Lochery is a serious historian so he doesn’t play up the espionage side of things as much as some others, eerr like me, might.
Colour Me English – Caryl Phillips – Enjoyed the essays that were actually about England but there’s way too much of not that informed, not that original English in New York balls sadly. Basically anyone expecting an analysis of English, Englishness, multiracial Britain should ask for their money back. Better to go back and read Philips’s Foreigners, a set of three superb biographies of Black Britons that was great.
Blood on the Altar – Tobias Jones – Jones’s The Dark Heart of Italy is really the book to read if you’re at all interesting in Italy – going there on summer holiday? Definitely read it. Blood on the Altar is the true story of the Elisa Claps murder in Potenza that ended up unsolved and uncovering the links and scandals in the church, government, big families and pretty much all Italian institutions. That it was eventually solved after a bizarre murder in, of all places, Bournemouth once again shows how truth is stranger than fiction. I spoke at an event at the Hay Festival this year with Tobias and he was great – that’s the enthusiasm and depth of knowledge on Italy you get in this book too.

Venetian Navigators: The Voyages of the Zen Brothers to the Far North – Andrea di Robilant – an interesting tale of an obscure map, Venetian explorers and the north country. We’re used to Venetians going east (Mr Polo) but up north is a bit different. Interesting ruminations and observations on the Scottish Islands, the Faroes, Scandinavia, Greenland, Iceland, the colonisation of Canada and America and the search for the North West Passage north to Cathay (more my area that).
The Most Beautiful Walk in the World – John Baxter – A gentle flaneur though the streets of Paris in the company of Baxter who’s interests range form literature to art and les apaches to decadent nightclubs. Baxter also likes food and I am a resolute non-foodie but still enjoyed this. Not much deft but a lot of meandering wistful style. I’ll read three of four books a year on Paris and this was a nice starter for 2012.
Memoir/Autobiography
The Man Within My Head – Pico Iyer – a marvellously weaving and snaking book that looks at Iyer’s motivations and travels but always in the shadow of his hero and historical interlocutor Graham Greene who has dogged the writer through his life. Those, like me, who find life without Greene impossible to imagine and view the world as a giant Greeneland will find this an absorbing read that ends too soon.

Yesterday Morning – Diana Athill – Athill’s memoir of her rather privileged childhood in the English countryside in the interwar years is as lyrically delightful yet insightful as her other works. Her musings on first loves, infatuations and affairs are particularly good to read.
West End Girls – Barbara Tate – not the greatest piece of autobiographical literature ever but Tate’s memoir of being a prostitute’s maid in Soho in the late 1940s and 1950s. If she’s telling the truth then the sheer number of clients her girls used to get through were amazing. One book in which the Maltese appear as pimps and ponces – a bit of a minor theme at the moment with all the post-war set novels coming out.