Waiting for Wikileaks in China

What if the Chinese government suffered from Wikileaks? In the New York Review of Books, Perry Link ponders this hypothetical as the Party wrestles to keep control of history and faces its own problems with leaked documents and a sudden boomlet in memoirs by departed (and soon-to-be departed) leaders trying to put a final spin on their legacies as they make their way up the stairs to meet Marx.

At issue is the power of archives and memory.  Once opened, archives offer historians, scholars, journalists, researchers and all manner of other interested parties access to the primary stuff from which narratives are constructed.  Limiting access to this information is essential for any group that seeks to maintain a particular narrative, all the more so if the archive contains materials which complicate or contradict that narrative.

George Orwell famously wrote, “He who controls the past, controls the present. He who controls the present, controls the future.” A corollary to Orwell is: He who controls the archives — the actual room with the paper or the server with the emails — has a huge advantage in controlling that past.

Professor Link concludes:

Broadly speaking there are two kinds of reasons why Chinese

Image of the Week: Inner Mongolia’s Big Sky Country

Storm clouds rolling through Inner Mongolia's Big Sky Country. Photo taken on Hulunbeir Grasslands, September 2009

Why the number “12″ matters: The end of the Qing and my first pub quiz

I’ve been told that my only talent is as a repository of useless trivia (hence: the history degree) and have also on more than one occasion been accused of being something of an obnoxious know-it-all (Thanks, Mom!), and…I like pubs. So this was an idea whose time had come, right? Wrong?

Image of the Week: Long Corridor, Summer Palace

Roof design, Long Corridor, Summer Palace, Beijing

Hong Xiuquan vs. Jim Morrison: The Taiping Lizard King?

On twitter last week, Shanghai-based author and historian Derek Sandhaus (@dsandhaus for those who are tweet-ready) made the following comment:

“She who can truly ease the flame understands the Way.” -Heavenly King Hong Xiuquan channeling his inner Jim Morrison.”

I thought…wow, who wins in a Lizard King/Taiping smackdown?

So…channeling my inner Bill Simmons channeling his Dr. Jack, here is the breakdown:

Jim Morrison and his dead Indians, Hong Xiuquan and the Manchu demons, flaming swords, and the whole “God is my father” dream sequence in which he was commanded to purge the Earth of evil.  EDGE: Hong Xiuquan

Educational achievement? Morrison famously walked out of UCLA film school and formed a rock and roll band that performed on Ed Sullivan. Hong just as famously flunked the provincial-level exams, had a nervous breakdown, and formed a God-Worshipping Society which went on to nearly topple an empire in a massive war that cost the lives of as many as 30 million people.  EDGE: Hong Xiuquan

God complex? Hong Xiuquan was perhaps a bit clearer in his claims to be God’s son, but anyone who plays balance beam on the Venice Beach sea wall loudly proclaiming “I am the Lizard King, I can

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