Afternoon Tea: Yu Hua on public trust, China Beat on Yuanmingyuan, Young woman mounts Mao in public (no, it’s not what you think)

You know it’s cold in your little hutong home when your hibernating pet turtle wakes up, climbs out of his bowl, and is found huddling under the space heater.  Still not sure how he did it, we’re thinking he had an outside accomplice with our cat the most likely suspect.

Some hits from around the web on this sunny and cold Friday afternoon:

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Yu Hua has garnered considerable press with the publication in English of his novel Brothers.  Ian Johnson interviews the author for the Wall Street Journal Asia Edition and I was particularly struck by this observation on public trust:

But what bothers Mr. Yu more about these obvious problems is a lack of trust in society. The book trade itself is good example of this, he says. “It’s really hard for a young author to break in because there are few reputable critics. It’s corrupt. People pay critics to write all sorts of nonsense.” He says reviewers charge 3,000 to 5,000 yuan for a review. The accusation is impossible to prove but it is true that China has a weak scene of literary criticism. He contrasts the situation to a western publication like France’s Le Monde. He

A historical bon mot…

Adapting a meme from my good friend Froog:

“The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.”

L.P. Hartley

The Historical Record for February 17, 2009: The 30th Anniversary of the Sino-Vietnamese War

It’s tough being an American.  After the last eight years we…lack a certain moral standing in the world.  Any comment or criticism directed at human rights or state behavior is met with the immediate response: “Yeah, but you guys invaded Iraq.”  Nowhere, perhaps, is this witty rejoinder more commonly heard than in the PRC, with “China has NEVER invaded ANYONE” sure to follow.

Well, it does depend on what you mean by “invade” and “anyone,” but this isn’t a post about Τibet, it’s about Vietnam.

On this date in 1979, the PLA launched a massive invasion of Vietnam with 200,000 troops supported by artillery, and armor.*  The assault was an attempt by Beijing to punish that country for  toppling the PRC-backed Khmer Rouge government in Cambodia, developing closer ties with the Soviet union, and the treatment of ethnic Chinese in Vietnam.

The result was disaster.  Fighting against battle-hardened guerrillas and having made a fateful decision to forgo  air cover, PLA casualties were enormous with between 25,000 to 63,000 Chinese soldiers killed.  Vietnamese figures range as high as 100,000 soldiers and civilian casualties. By comparison, the total number of US soldiers killed in action during the decade-plus American debacle in Southeast

PRC: The Movie!

The CCP is going all out this year to mark the 60th anniversary of the founding of the PRC.  The first announcement involved back-to-the-future plans for the largest military parade ever held in the country.  Now comes word that China’s film community will celebrate the occasion with an equally grand (though hopefully less Freudian) event of their own: a major motion picture featuring “the most powerful lineup in the history of Chinese film.”

You know what that means, right? Yep, they’ve already booked Andy Lau:

Infernal Affairs star Andy Lau is set to appear in a major new film to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the communist revolution in China, reports Variety.

The feature, which will be directed by Huang Jianxin, boasts “the most powerful lineup in the history of Chinese film”, according to its state-backed producers. It will also star directors Chen Kaige and Feng Xiaogang in acting roles, with Tang Guoqiang and Zhang Guoli playing the first chairman of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), Mao Tse-tung, and his civil war rival “Generalissimo” Chiang Kai-shek.

No budget details have been made available but producers said those involved in the film, to be titled The Great Cause of China’s

Valentine’s Day in Beijing: Dirty Dancing and Messy Burritos

“No flowers.  Nothing looks tackier than girls walking around on dates with wilted overpriced roses.  Chocolates MIGHT work…”

These were my marching orders.  Frankly, while she has a great sense of style, and quirky sense of humor, YJ has never been much of a “girly girl,” but Valentine’s Day comes once a year so…the husband has to suit up and think of SOMETHING.

It’s also a little known secret (though probably better known now) that February 14th is our “official”  — as opposed to the one we celebrate — anniversary.  It was on this date two years ago that we went down to to the courthouse and the Tianjin Office of Marriage Certification put it all to rest, there were a few wedding day smiles but no walks down the aisles, and no, she didn’t wear a wedding dress.*

We’re also on a ‘gotta find new restaurants’ kick.  Since 2007, Beijing’s restaurant scene has grown in size and sophistication.  Actual French people running French restaurants… know, crazy huh?  Long gone are the days when a restaurant could advertise “Western Food” as an actual cuisine and keep a straight face.   (“Sure, we serve Western Food…didn’t you see the three pieces of

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