Remember those jailbirds who know all of each others’ jokes? They don’t tell the whole joke, just shout out the number from the jokebook. Our public discourse on China has something of the same quality. Instead of shouting out a number, however, somebody “shouts out” a word or an image which evokes a whole China story. These stories can be persuasive, poetic, or insightful, but when we only “shout out” the number, then we don’t have the chance to examine the whole story. Painful facts or challenges to venerable beliefs can be papered over when the story is a misleading relic
It’s now a year since Chinese nationalism had its last big public outing. On April 19, 2008, twelve ...
One day when I was four, I found an interesting book on the shelf, called A Strange Patient. This an...
Karl Gerth is a tutor and fellow at Merton College and a historian of modern China at Oxford Univers...
Remember those jailbirds who know all of each others’ jokes? They don’t tell the whole joke, just sh...
To conclude my Chinese history lecture course at the University of Kentucky, I introduce my undergra...
(Part One) Understanding jokes in another language is often the highest test of fluency, based as th...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
Reporting China for a Western readership gets a whole lot easier once you master the discursive mont...
Several years ago, I gave a talk on my research to a community group. My first slide included the wo...
China has been looming ever larger in the global economy and the global imagination in recent years,...
So many authors and pundits today attempt to predict China’s future by looking at the numbers: GDP, ...
Last week, we ran the first part of a series of popular Chinese jokes, translated by Guo Qitao, a UC...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
During his first trip to China recently, Barack Obama was excoriated by pundits for his meekness on ...
It’s now a year since Chinese nationalism had its last big public outing. On April 19, 2008, twelve ...
One day when I was four, I found an interesting book on the shelf, called A Strange Patient. This an...
Karl Gerth is a tutor and fellow at Merton College and a historian of modern China at Oxford Univers...
Remember those jailbirds who know all of each others’ jokes? They don’t tell the whole joke, just sh...
To conclude my Chinese history lecture course at the University of Kentucky, I introduce my undergra...
(Part One) Understanding jokes in another language is often the highest test of fluency, based as th...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
Reporting China for a Western readership gets a whole lot easier once you master the discursive mont...
Several years ago, I gave a talk on my research to a community group. My first slide included the wo...
China has been looming ever larger in the global economy and the global imagination in recent years,...
So many authors and pundits today attempt to predict China’s future by looking at the numbers: GDP, ...
Last week, we ran the first part of a series of popular Chinese jokes, translated by Guo Qitao, a UC...
Headlines about China have been looking the same for some time now. “The China story” always seems t...
During his first trip to China recently, Barack Obama was excoriated by pundits for his meekness on ...
It’s now a year since Chinese nationalism had its last big public outing. On April 19, 2008, twelve ...
One day when I was four, I found an interesting book on the shelf, called A Strange Patient. This an...
Karl Gerth is a tutor and fellow at Merton College and a historian of modern China at Oxford Univers...