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Submit ReviewThis week on the Sinica Podcast, Jeremy and I chat with Mike Chinoy, the legendary award-winning TV newsman who helmed CNN in Beijing for many critical years. Mike talks about the video documentary series and accompanying book Assignment China: An Oral History of American Journalists in the People’s Republic, for which he interviewed about 130 journalists whose careers spanned an 80-year period, from the 1940s to the present.
04:08 – The genesis of the Assignment China project
11:15 – Editorial decisions: What was included, and what wasn’t
16:13 – The big takeaways for Mike on finishing this project
25:13 – The role of contingency and the observer effect
32:52 – How Tiananmen really made CNN and changed the future of cable news
36:30 – Tough ethical calls in the reporting of China
42:42 – Structural biases in American reporting on China…
50:50 – …and what news consumers can do to adjust for those baked-in biases
52:54 – Does where the reporters are actually determine what the story is?
1:02:17 – What went wrong with TV news?
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com.
Recommendations:
Mike: Who by Fire: Leonard Cohen in the Sinai by Matti Friedman
Jeremy: From the Jewish Provinces: Selected Stories by Fradl Shtok, translated by Jordan Finkin and Allison Schachter
Kaiser: Father's Laszlo Ladany's "Ten Commandments" on China-watching, and playing around with ChatGPT 4
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This week on Sinica, Kishore Mahbubani, who served as Singapore's UN Ambassador and has written extensively on ASEAN and the U.S.-China rift, returns to the show to discuss his recent essay in Foreign Affairs, and to advocate for the pragmatic approach that's held ASEAN together for over five decades of continuous peace and growing prosperity.
4:36 – Kishore talks about Macron’s state visit to China and the controversy around his comments in media interviews
8:53 – How the Ukraine War has highlighted divisions between the West and the Global South
11:45 – Pragmatism: is this a euphemism for amorality?
15:26 – ASEAN as a template for multipolarity
19:38 – Cultural relativism, moral absolutism, and the shift in the American intelligentsia
24:56 – How does ASEAN handle specific issues of U.S.-China tension?
29:12 – Investment and trade: China and ASEAN vs. U.S and ASEAN — guns and butter
40:04 – The Belt and Road Initiative and American attitudes toward it
44:10 – Kishore’s “three rules” for U.S. engagement with ASEAN
49:49 – China’s recent diplomatic efforts: Saudi-Iran, and the Ukraine War
52:34 – How receptive has the American strategic class been to Kishore’s ideas?
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com.
Recommendations:
Kishore: John Rawls, A Theory of Justice
Kaiser: The Silk Roads: A New History of the World by Peter Frankopan
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This week on Sinica, something different: Kaiser asks over a dozen scholars of various facets of China studies to talk about their work and make some recommendations! You'll hear from a variety of scholars, from MA students to tenured professors, talking about a bewildering range of fascinating work they're doing. Enjoy!
3:00 – Kristin Shi-Kupfer — recommendations: this essay (in Chinese) by Teng Biao on Chinese Trump supporters; Han Rongbin's work on digital society; and Yang Guobin's work on digital expression on the internet in China.
7:48 – Lev Nachman — recommendation: Ian Rowen, One China, Many Taiwans: The Geopolitics of Cross-Strait Tourism; and the city of Taichung, and especially its night market food on Yizhong Street and the Fang Chia Night market.
9:27 – Lin Zhang — recommendation: Victor Seow, Carbon Technocracy: Energy Regimes in Modern East Asia; and Gary Gertle, American Crucible: Race and Nation in the 20th Century
15:32 – Maura Dykstra — recommendation: Richard von Glahn's contribution to the Oxford History of Modern China about registration in imperial China
19:00 – Jonathan Elkobi — a Rand Corporation study on economic cooperation between Israel and China; the fusion band Snarky Puppy
22:22 – Seiji Shirane — Seediq Bale (Warriors of the Rainbow) and Lust, Caution
25:18 – Zhu Qian — Rebecca Karl, Staging the World: Chinese Nationalism at the Turn of the 20th Century, and two films: Hou Hsiao-hsien's A City of Sadness and Jia Zhangke's A Touch of Sin
31:23– Fabio Lanza — Sarah Mellors Rodriguez, Reproductive Realities in Modern China: Birth Control and Abortion, 1911–2021; and Leopoldina Fortunati, The Arcane of Reproduction: Housework, Prostitution, Labor and Capital by Leopoldina Fortunati
33:04 – Catherine Tsai —:Hiroko Matsuda’s The Liminality of the Japanese Empire
34:46– Lena Kaufmann — Technology and Gender: Fabrics of Power in Late Imperial China and other works by Francesca Bray
39:05 – Josh Freeman — Works of Uyghur poetry by Ghojimuhemmed Muhemmed, Ekhmetjan Osman, Tahir Hamut Izgil, Perhat Tursun, Dilkhumar Imin, Abide Abbas Nesrin, Erkan Qadir, and Muyesser Abdul'ehed Hendan.
41:32 – Susan McCarthy — Joanna Handlin Smith, The Art of Doing Good: Charity in Late Ming China
49:18 – Brian DeMare — William Hinton, Fanshen
50:47 – Juliet Lu — Maria Repnikova, Chinese Soft Power, and Samuel L. Jackson reading Adam Mansbach's Go the F--k to Sleep
58:29 – Sabina Knight — Wu Ming-Yi, The Man with the Compound Eyes, translated by Darryl Sterk
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com
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This week on Sinica, Kaiser chats with Chris Marquis, a professor at Cambridge University’s Judge Business School, and formerly at Cornell’s business school, about the book he co-authored with Kunyuan Qiao, Mao and Markets: The Communist Roots of Chinese Enterprise. In it, they examine how even in China's private sector, socialization into the ideology of the Chinese Communist Party among some entrepreneurs has left an enduring legacy that is visible in some of the ways Chinese private enterprises conduct business.
3:35 – Motivation for Mao and Markets
5:34 – Enduring elements of Maoism in contemporary Chinese enterprise
12:35 – Variation among “Maoist” entrepreneurs
20:40 – Differentiating superficial and authentic Maoist entrepreneurship
35:04 – Is today’s China ideological or simply nationalistic?
39:17 – Xi’s Maoist revival: real or imagined?
44:30 – Chris’s transition from business and sociology to Chinese politics
47:09 – Chris’s experience as a Thousand Talents recipient
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com.
Recommendations:
Chris: The Entrepreneurial State and The Big Con by Mariana Mazzucato
Kaiser: This calendar of lunar phases from my.sharepoint.com/personal/jmart273_jh_edu/Documents/Sinica/Chris%20Marquis/theoriginallunarphase.com">theoriginallunarphase.com, and Mongolian salty milk tea, or sūūtei tsai
which is easy to make at home
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This week, a bonus episode to keep you caught up on the week's biggest China story: Xi Jinping's two days of meetings with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Maria Repnikova, a Latvian-born native Russian speaker who is also fluent in Chinese and who teaches Chinese politics and communications at Georgia State University, joins the show again to talk about what each side hoped for, what each side got, and the asymmetries of power on conspicuous display in Moscow.
1:53 – Does Beijing look at the Ukraine War and still see the United States, as Maria argued last year?
3:06 – How Xi and Putin spoke to their own domestic audiences, and to each other’s
4:43 – How the Xi-Putin meeting was viewed in the Global South
8:10 – Why was the elephant in the room go mostly unremarked upon?
10:27 – Junior partner, senior partner, and “optionality”
16:27 – Did Putin come away disappointed from the meeting?
18:03 – How did China’s peace framework come off in the West vs. in China?
21:11 – What might the United States have done differently — and what might it still do to prevent China from drifting too close to Russia?
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com.
Recommendations:
Maria: Solomon Elusoji, Travelling with Big Brother: A Reporter’s Junket in China
Kaiser: The Polish progressive rock band Riverside, and its latest album ID.Entity
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This week on Sinica, Kaiser welcomes Tuvia Gering of Israel's Institute of National Security Studies, where he focuses on China's relations with Israel and other countries of the Middle East. Tuvia breaks down the agreement to normalize relations between Riyadh and Tehran, which Beijing brokered during secret talks that were only revealed, along with the fruit they bore, on March 10.
6:05 – How was China able to broker the Saudi-Iran normalization?
17:00 – Notable commitments from Saudi, Iran, and China
25:01 – China’s non-energy interests in and engagement with the Middle East
29:03 – Reactions from world capitals
39:28 – Saudi’s balancing act between U.S. security partnership and engagement with China
49:52 – Implications for China as a mediator in Ukraine and other international conflict zones
52:44 – Overview of China-Israel relations
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com.
Recommendations:
Tuvia: King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard on YouTube
Kaiser: The Venture of Islam by Marshall G. S. Hodgson
Mentioned:
Tuvia's Discourse Power Substack
The China-Global South Podcast
Tuvia’s interview with retired PLA Colonel Zhou Bo
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This week on Sinica, Kaiser welcomes Taisu Zhang, professor of law at Yale University, who discusses his recent work on the expansion of the administrative state down to the subdistrict and neighborhood level — changes that are far-reaching, and likely permanent. They also discuss a recent essay in Foreign Affairsi n which Taisu argued that Beijing is shifting away from "performance legitimacy" as the foundation of political rule, and more toward legality — not to be confused with the rule of law.
3:29 – Nationalism as legitimacy, and its grounding in economic performance
7:45 – The CCP’s unique approach to “legal legitimacy”
21:28 – Evidence from the Two Meetings, or 兩會 liǎnghuì
35:56 – Chinese Administrative Expansion in the Xi Jinping Era
49:40 – The role of the anti-corruption campaign in expanding local government authority
56:18 – Changes in local governance after COVID
1:01:27 – Who were the dàbái?
1:04:10 – Technology in China’s post-pandemic power structure
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com.
Recommendations:
Taisu: The Utopia of Rules: On Technology, Stupidity and the Secret Joys of Bureaucracy by David Graeber; The Rise and Fall of Imperial China: The Social Origins of State Development by Yuhua Wang; Uncertainty in the Empire of Routine: The Administrative Revolution of the Eighteenth-Century Qing State by Maura Dykstra; The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu; and The Lower Yangzi Trilogy by Ge Fei
Kaiser: Kaiser: Assignment China: An Oral History of American Journalists in the People's Republic by Mike Chinoy; and the many uses of beeswax-about-1lb-block.asp">beeswax
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This week on Sinica, Kaiser chats with Lulu Chen, who has reported on tech in China for over a decade and is the author of the book Influence Empire: The Inside Story of Tencent and China's Tech Ambition. It's a fascinating look at not only Tencent but at the overall internet sector in China, focusing on the travails and the triumphs of some of the most consequential Chinese internet entrepreneurs.
5:31 – Motivation for and background of Influence Empire
10:15 – Ma Huateng and Martin Lau at Tencent
19:56 – How the Chinese internet sector went from copying to innovating
30:59 – Cutthroat company cultures
33:20 – What made Allen Zhang successful?
37:25 – The Tencent-Meituan food delivery coup
45:21 – Tencent’s position in the online game industry
51:58 – Understanding China’s 2020-2022 tech crackdown
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com.
Recommendations:
Lulu: The Gay Talese Reader: Portraits and Encounters by Gay Talese
Kaiser: Cunk on Earth on Netflix
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A second full episode this week for you Sinica listeners! Jude Blanchette joins to talk about the House Select Committee on United States Competition with the Chinese Communist Party, and all that is wrong with it, from its framing of the CCP as an "existential threat" to its focus on the CCP, and how all of this adds up to an embarrassing moral panic that distracts from the serious issues the U.S. confronts when it comes to China.
4:37 – What’s wrong with the Select Committee’s framing of China as an “existential threat,” and why the first hearing was an embarrassment
9:01 – The current moment as a moral panic over China
12:09 – Domestic political drivers of U.S. China policy
15:04 – Why the United States versus the Chinese Communist Party is the wrong framing too
22:46 – Is this more like McCarthyism — or antisemitism?
28:58 – The downstream effects of U.S. tech containment policy toward China
42:01 – The advantage of simplistic, Manichean messaging
46:15 – Prioritizing U.S. issues with China: why Confucius Institutes and TikTok are so far down the to-do list, and what really matters48:59 – And what are the real issues that deserve priority?
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com
Recommendations:
Jude: Miracle and Wonder: Conversations with Paul Simon by Malcolm Gladwell and Bruce Headlam, from Audible
Kaiser: This podcast interview with Angela Rasmussen, the virologist who has been in the front lines fighting back against the resurgent lab leak theory, from the Slate What Next: TBD podcast
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This week on Sinica, Kaiser and Jeremy speak with Henry Sanderson, a former AP and Bloomberg reporter who was based in China for many years, about his book Volt Rush: The Winners and Losers in the Race to Go Green — a book that reminds us of the very ugly fact that the metals that are needed to make electric vehicle batteries need to be dug out of the earth, and processed in ways that are anything but environmentally friendly. Henry talks about China's outsize role in lithium, cobalt, and nickel processing, as well as some promising chemistries that allow for EV batteries without some of the problematic metals.
2:49 – China’s role in the EV battery supply chain
9:36 – Global Chinese investments in lithium mines
14:04 – Is cobalt a necessary evil?
18:56 – Can NGO pressure induce better corporate behavior in EV battery supply chains?
21:28 – How Indonesia used its nickel resources to attract Chinese FDI
26:17 – China’s efforts to innovate around scarce metals
32:08 – China’s metal processing industry: State- or market-driven?
36:06 – Lessons from Europe’s battery industry
40:42 – Electrification of two-wheeled vehicles
A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com.
Recommendations:
Jeremy: London Review of Books
Henry: The Impossible City: A Hong Kong Memoir by Karen Cheung
Kaiser: Tracking the People’s Daily newsletter by Manoj Kewalramani
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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