All things old China - books, anecdotes, stories, podcasts, factoids & ramblings from the author Paul French

RAS Beijing: Ghostbusters, East and West: Comparing Perceptions of the Supernatural – 27/9/23

Posted: September 15th, 2023 | No Comments »
Do you believe in the supernatural? Asian culture is full of ghosts, and during this talk, taking place between the Hungry Ghost Festival and Halloween, speaker Jim Nobles and moderator Adam Ensign will endeavour to bring a few of them to life. 
WHAT: “Ghostbusters, East and West: Comparing perceptions of the supernatural”, an RASBJ in-person talk by Jim Nobles, moderated by Adam EnsignWHEN: Wednesday, September 27, 2023 from 7:00-8:00 PM Beijing TimeWHERE: The Courtyard Institute, 28 Zhonglao Hutong, Dongcheng district, Beijing北京市东城区中老胡同28号,四合书院On Didi and GPS search: Sihe College, 28 Zhonglao Hutong. (Parking is impossible.)

MORE ABOUT THE EVENT: Beliefs in ghosts and the supernatural are an integral part of both Asian and Western cultures and have featured in Chinese customs and literature since pre-dynastic days. This presentation will focus on these concepts (including methods of protecting against or defeating such forces) and compare them with their Western equivalents. It will also analyze some of the stories of Pu Songling as well as of Western gothic. With Halloween almost upon us, and the Hungry Ghost Festival recently concluded, this is a timely discussion – but it’s not for the faint of heart!

ABOUT THE SPEAKER: James Nobles is an educator and founder of Bizarre Beijing, a company that specializes in haunted walking tours, macabre events and unusual lectures. He has studied the unusual aspects of Beijing’s history and has introduced people to the “dark side” of the Chinese capital. He is the author of an upcoming book, “Haunted Beijing”.

WHAT: “Ghostbusters, East and West: Comparing perceptions of the supernatural”, an RASBJ in-person talk by Jim Nobles, moderated by Adam EnsignWHEN: Wednesday, September 27, 2023 from 7:00-8:00 PM Beijing TimeWHERE: The Courtyard Institute, 28 Zhonglao Hutong, Dongcheng district, Beijing北京市东城区中老胡同28号,四合书院On Didi and GPS search: Sihe College, 28 Zhonglao Hutong. (Parking is impossible.)MORE ABOUT THE EVENT: Beliefs in ghosts and the supernatural are an integral part of both Asian and Western cultures and have featured in Chinese customs and literature since pre-dynastic days. This presentation will focus on these concepts (including methods of protecting against or defeating such forces) and compare them with their Western equivalents. It will also analyze some of the stories of Pu Songling as well as of Western gothic. With Halloween almost upon us, and the Hungry Ghost Festival recently concluded, this is a timely discussion – but it’s not for the faint of heart!ABOUT THE SPEAKER: James Nobles is an educator and founder of Bizarre Beijing, a company that specializes in haunted walking tours, macabre events and unusual lectures. He has studied the unusual aspects of Beijing’s history and has introduced people to the “dark side” of the Chinese capital. He is the author of an upcoming book, “Haunted Beijing”.ABOUT THE MODERATOR: Adam Ensign has been an instructor in the School of Foreign Languages at Renmin University since 2016. Having earned his master’s degree in linguistics from Peking University’s Department of Chinese Language and Literature in 2012, he formerly taught at Beijing Language and Culture University and worked as a part-time translator and editor for the Palace Museum’s Department of IT, Imaging, and Digital Media.HOW MUCH: Admission is RMB 100 for members and RMB 200 for non-members, which includes one welcome drink plus light nibbles.HOW TO JOIN THE EVENT: Please click “Register” or “I Will Attend” by noon on September 27, and follow the instructions. If you experience difficulty paying via WeChat, please try Alipay instead. After successful registration you will receive a confirmation email. If you seem not to have received it, please check your spam folder. Numbers will be limited; places will be allocated in order of receipt of payment. Successful registrants will receive the QR code for Weixin RASBJ Chat, where updates and last-minute details will be posted

Destination Shanghai – RTHK3 Abridged Chapters – Elly Widler – Shanghai’s Most Charming Gangster (1940)

Posted: September 14th, 2023 | No Comments »

Listen to an abridged version of the chapter – Shanghai’s Most Charming Gangster:
Elly ‘The Swiss’ Widler (1940) from Destination Shanghai (Blacksmith Books)


Destination Shanghai – RTHK3 Abridged Chapters – Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford Hit the ‘Hai

Posted: September 13th, 2023 | No Comments »

Listen to an abridged version of the chapter – Nearly Snubbed by Shanghai: Douglas Fairbanks & Mary Pickford (1929) from Destination Shanghai (Blacksmith Books)


Zuanshi Watches of Shanghai

Posted: September 12th, 2023 | 1 Comment »

Perhaps the best known watch brand of post-1949 and pre-reform China was the Shanghai Watch Company. Second to them was Zuanshi Watches and today Zuanshi timepieces are far harder to fin d than the fairly common Shanghai watches. Shanghai Watch was better known and remains more widely found in auctions and markets because a) it was in business longer than Zuanshi b) it produced a lot more models than Zuanshi and c) Shanghai Watch was championed by Zhou En-lai which gave it a status and street cred in the 60s and 70s. It’s Shanghai factory and workers housing down in Yangpu by Dalian Road was demolioshed in 2011. A part of the factory remained for a few years and certainly until about 2012 where Saturday mornings saw dealers (mostly former employees who had managed to get a lot of watches) and collectors (on my visits always all, except me, Shanghainese). All of that lot was then cleared (see here)

Zuanshi though was also a Shanghai-based watch company that launched its first watches in 1958 and in the 1960s continued to put out various wrist watches and also stopwatches. I beleive the company closed down in the late 1970s as a separate operation and merged with a Hangzhou weatch company. There are some nice example here.

I got a bag of random Chinese watches at an auction lately that included worthless rubbish Mao waving watches, some decent Shanghai watches and two nice Zuanshis…so you can spot them at your local auction here’s the ones I got…

Another Zuanshi face, again with Chinese numbers and the word “friendship”

Waiting to Be Arrested at Night: A Uyghur Poet’s Memoir of China’s Genocide

Posted: September 11th, 2023 | No Comments »

Tahir Hamut Izgil’s Waiting to Be Arrested at Night: A Uyghur Poet’s Memoir of China’s Genocide (trans: Joshua L Freeman – Jonathan Cape Books)…

If you took an Uber in Washington DC a few years ago, there’s a chance your driver was one of the greatest living Uyghur poets, and one of only a handful from his minority Muslim community to escape the genocide being visited upon his homeland in western China.

A successful filmmaker, innovative poet and prominent intellectual, Tahir Hamut Izgil had long been acquainted with state surveillance and violence, having spent three years in a labour camp on fabricated charges.

But in 2017, the Chinese government’s repression of its Uyghur citizens assumed a terrifying new intensity: critics were silenced; conversations became hushed; passports were confiscated; and Uyghurs were forced to provide DNA samples and biometric data.

As Izgil’s friends disappeared one by one, it became clear that fleeing the country was his family’s only hope.

Waiting to Be Arrested at Night charts the ongoing destruction of a community and a way of life. It is a call for the world to awaken to a humanitarian catastrophe, an unforgettable story of courage, escape and survival, and a moving tribute to Izgil’s friends and fellow Uyghurs whose voices have been silenced.


Japanese Aesthetics of Recycling – Exhibition at SOAS, London till September 23

Posted: September 10th, 2023 | No Comments »

the Japanese Aesthetics of Recycling Exhibition is on at SOAS’s Brunei Gallery, London, till September 23. More details here


Book 35 on The China Project Ultimate China Bookshelf – David Kidd’s Peking Story (1961)

Posted: September 9th, 2023 | No Comments »

This weeks ultimate China book is David Kidd’s memoir of a traditional courtyard life disturbed by the interregnum following 1949 and the CCP seizure of power. Click here – https://thechinaproject.com/2023/09/07/all-the-traditions-lost-after-the-communists-entered-beijing/


A History of Water: Being an Account of a Murder, an Epic and Two Visions of Global History

Posted: September 8th, 2023 | No Comments »

Somehow I missed Edward Wilson-Lee’s A History of Water (HarperCollins) when it cvame out earlier his year – so here it is now…and well worth reading too…

A History of Water follows the interconnected lives of two men across the Renaissance globe. One of them – an aficionado of mermen and Ethiopian culture, an art collector, historian and expert on water-music – returns home from witnessing the birth of the modern age to die in a mysterious incident, apparently the victim of a grisly and curious murder. The other – a ruffian, vagabond and braggart, chased across the globe from Mozambique to Japan – ends up as the national poet of Portugal.

The stories of Damião de Góis and Luís de Camões capture the extraordinary wonders that awaited Europeans on their arrival in India and China, the challenges these marvels presented to longstanding beliefs, and the vast conspiracy to silence the questions these posed about the nature of history and of human life.

Like all good mysteries, everyone has their own version of events.