Tuesday, January 29, 2008

A 20th century capital that could have been

After reading Eric Hobsbawm's article on Weimar Germany, I have come to a better understanding of cultural and intellectual capital (capital as defined in accumulated goods, stock).

First, it spoke of a subject that is the source of some chagrin, the fact that I would have gotten more out intellectually in learning German than French. The article affirmed for myself that my instincts were correct - German had more intellectual capital in the course of the early 20th century. Foucault, Sartre were just leaves in the wind when you consider the people who came before them:

For the basic achievements of the Weimar Republic and the reasons non-Germans take an interest in it are not political but intellectual and cultural. The word today suggests the Bauhaus, George Grosz, Max Beckmann, Walter Benjamin, the great photographer August Sander and a number of remarkable movies. Weitz picks out six names: Thomas Mann, Brecht, Kurt Weill, Heidegger and the less familiar theorist Siegfried Kracauer and the artist Hannah Höch. One could as easily add, say, Carl Schmitt on the (rare) intellectual right, Ernst Bloch on the far left and the great Max Weber in the middle.


And on culture, what does Paris has to offer really aside from this populist belief in a foreign and romantic location where the business at the end of the day is to consume our imaginative trysts:

The prestige of Paris, ‘capital of the 19th century’, obscured the fact that it no longer had major innovations to offer between the wars except for Surrealism, itself largely derived from the multinational Dada of the Zurich Central European refugees.


Having visited Paris personally, I can speak with some measure of agreement that a visit to the city would not change anything drastically say, your notion of destiny, or gaining a new sense of purpose.

I digress to compare German to French, Berlin to Paris not because they are apples to apples or oranges to oranges, but because it is personally resonating. The article itself captures a moment in time when intellectual and cultural capital are at their zenith in a place that has vanished.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

One Night in Beijing

I like the 京剧 parts of this song

the original:


sang by Shin:



sang by Xiao Jingteng (extremely impressed by his ability to sing both parts, he sings the best rendition in my opinion):
"Recital is the unsophisticated assassination of poetry."

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

The NY Times is behind the times on China by 6 months

On the traffic reduction strategy of Beijing to clean up the air before the Olympics, take a look at these two newspapers

this - by NY Times in January 2008 versus this - by the Guardian in August 2007

Just another in a string of lazy and inane reporting by the New York Times.

LRB reviews Lust, Caution

A review of the movie 色,戒.

I think a lot of viewers miss the point of the movie, and think this is suppose to be a spy thriller:

Lust, Caution is billed as a film about sex and espionage, lots of both, and occasionally it looks like such a work. All its interesting moments, however, are about something else: style, masquerade, glances, silences.

on screen dimensionality:

Each character in the movie has a movie running in his or her head, and when a young woman called Wong Chia-chi (played by Tang Wei), about to become a temptress setting up a collaborationist Chinese official for assassination, sits in a cinema and weeps copious tears, we know she will never be able to cry in this way outside the movie house. She is watching Ingrid Bergman, in Intermezzo, I think, and no one in her film – either in Lust, Caution or in the fiction she is acting out in the story – will ever declare his love, or say anything, as directly as Leslie Howard does in that Western melodrama.

the cinematography:

...the tender reconstruction of old Shanghai, the wartime mood, the sheer beauty of so many of the frames – makes the political thriller seem implausible, or even irrelevant, it also points us towards the work’s deepest concerns, already more than hinted at in the story (‘She had, in a past life, been an actress; and here she was, still playing a part, but in a drama too secret to make her famous’; ‘Her stage fright always evaporated once the curtain was up’).

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Another HBO Show

Addicted to The Wire.

Went through seasons 1 and 2. Season 1 is better.

This had me thinking when will A Song of Ice and Fire debut on HBO. I hope they won't gut it, or worse, show us the ending before the books are all published. In all likelihood I think that is probably the greatest harm it can do to the book series.

Monday, January 14, 2008

瑶族舞曲

The English Speaking World and China

The Pew Research Center on How the World Sees China noted an interesting fact:

(Interestingly, for reasons not apparent from these data, the English-speaking countries covered by the survey -- Great Britain, Canada, and even to a lesser extent the United States -- have decidedly more favorable overall views of China than do non-English-speaking Western nations.)


Study link here

Hmm....Inter-anglo regional rivalry? Better cultural exchanges between the English speaking world and China? Commerce (U.S. has been the main beneficiary of free trade, although some would think otherwise)?

I think it is the high level of academic and cultural exchanges because nowhere else can you find better analysis of China than in the English speaking world. Examples are here, here, here, here, and here. To name a few.

People back in China always wondered why study about China in the United States. It is because the studies are more rigorous.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Lost in Beijing



For the first half of the movie I couldn't decide whether it was a comedy or a tragedy. Especially the scene with Elaine Jin and Tong Dawei, those pairs of shades are just hilarious.

They really miscast Tony Leung Ka Fai for his role. Maybe because I associate him more with his role in Election, but the only way I saw he could be hurt is going fishing with Simon Yam. And here his "everything is OK la" personality just reinforce the invulnerability that ties to his years of wuxia and triad movie making. Invulnerable personality = bad for tragedy dramas.

Saw the uncut version of the film. And I have to say that unlike Tang Wei, Fan Bingbing got let down by a bad script. Not to say Fan Bingbing doesn't look pretty, but I liked Zeng Meihuizi (her name sounds so Japanese, wouldn't be surprised if she is). Her role wasn't big, but it was more believable.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Zhanjiang on the margins

Massive traffic accident that occurred on the Yuzhan Expressway in Zhanjiang, Guangdong Province

Well, that is my hometown in the news, however bad it may sound, any news is better than no news. I miss Zhanjiang, hope it is doing better now that they executed all those corrupt officials.

Some background: Zhanjiang is the southernmost deep water port in China, situated on the Leizhou peninsula of Guangdong, across Hainan island. Its location is a resource not unlike that of port cities such as Hong Kong and Singapore. There is a French village in Zhanjiang, although I have not the occasion to visit it. Obviously, this came from French occupation of Zhanjiang in the latter part of the 19th century when late imperial China was loosing all sorts of wars and giving concessions away.

From here all the natural resources in the South China Sea are within reach. Having blessed with such ideal location, Zhanjiang has the potential to become another trade center like Hong Kong. However this dream has been difficult to materialized due to practical considerations and other reasons.

Presently, Zhanjiang is the headquarters of the South Sea Fleet. From here China commands large portions of the South China Sea. The strategic location of Zhanjiang meant that economic development takes second priority to security.

Zhanjiang is also headquaters to CNOOC (China National Offshore Oil Corporation), who facing increasing competitive pressure from domestic and international companies after the company failed to acquire Unocal. I can only imagine what a blow the failed bid is to Zhanjiang's development. But that is not the reason by a large on Zhanjiang's slow economic development.

Organized corruption: any Chinese living on the Mainland today would take it as a matter of fact. In the case of Zhanjiang, the mayor, party chief, custom officials, and 200 other government officials, including elements of the navy were prosecuted and indicted in collusion and smuggling. 6 were later executed in 2000. Their corruption strangled the economic development of the city for years.

Failure to exploit its geographic potential while let slip the discipline of the navy in this strategic location is such a waste. If the city is mine for 10 years, I will turn it into another Guangzhou. Let me govern it for 20 years, I'll transform it into Shenzhen, another 10 (30 total) and I'll transform it into Taipei, add another 10, Hong Kong. Hell, since the navy is there already I throw in something extra and make a Singapore out of it after 50 years.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

俺 We

Beijing Opera dialog from 投名状 (The Warlords), scene of the sworn brotherhood of the three protagonists:

赵:俺,赵二虎...
庞:庞青云...
姜:姜午阳
众:弟兄三人
姜:欧血为盟, 神灵鉴, 义字当天对地天, 不求同生求同死
众:祸福共当, 肝胆悬

Zhao: We, Zhao Erhu...
Pang: Pang Qingyun...
Jiang: Jiang Wuyang
All: Brothers of three
Jiang:Sealing pact with blood, let the gods bear witness, the human ties formed today before heaven and earth, we ask not to be alive together but ask to die together
All: Misfortunes and fortunes endure by all, with spirits stern