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CBG - China consulting firm in San Diego |
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Biography and Autobiography
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Daughter of China: A True Story of Love and Betrayal
By Meihong Xu and Larry Engelmann
Headline Book Publishing, London, 1999
An exciting, well-told story about PLA First
Lieutenant Xu Meihong who is assigned to watch
suspected American spy Larry Engelmann. This
book is not only the story of how these two
– against all odds - fall in love and
escape to America, it is also an intriguing
look at the inner workings of the People’s
Liberation Army. |
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God's
Chinese Son: The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom
of Hong Xiuquan
By Jonathan D. Spence
W.W. Norton & Company, New York, 1996
The engrossing story of Hong Xiuquan, a man
who believed himself to be the younger brother
of Jesus Christ - God’s Chinese son.
Acting on what he believed was a direct order
from his Heavenly Father to struggle against
the evil polluting humanity, Hong lead the
Taiping (Heavenly Peace) uprising that successfully
overthrew the authority of the ruling Qing
Dynasty throughout a huge part of southern
China. The Taiping ruled this territory from
Nanjing for eleven years until they were overcome
by Qing and Western forces. Spence gives us
an intimate portrait of both an empire in
decline and the fevered spiritual world of
Hong. "With a scholar's love of detail,
a cinematic eye for color, and an evident
passion for dramatic narrative, [Spence] gives
us an irresistible tale--all the grander for
its grip on history." (Marie Arana-Ward,
Washington Post Book World) |
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The
Good Man of Nanking: The Diaries of John Rabe
Edited by Erwin Wickert
Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1999
A vivid, moving narrative by a German citizen
who, along with nine others, established a
demilitarized zone in Nanjing during the winter
of 1937 and the spring of 1938 to protect
Chinese citizens from the Imperial Japanese
Army’s infamous Rape of Nanking. Many
of the details recorded by Rabe are truly
horrific, yet he often managed to see the
humor in life, even in the midst of such despair.
For protecting its citizens, the Chinese government
proclaimed Mr. Rabe China’s Living Buddha. |
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The
Man Who Stayed Behind
By Sidney Rittenberg and Amanda Bennett
Simon & Schuster, New York, 1993
(This book is out of print. However, Amazon.com will query for a used book and inform you of the outcome. Click on the title to proceed.)
The remarkable personal account of the only
American who ever joined the Chinese Communist
Party. Imprisoned twice and kept in solitary
confinement for a total of sixteen years,
Sidney Rittenberg not only gives us a front
row seat to the events that shaped Communist
China, but he shows us the incredible resilience
of the human spirit in the face of almost
unspeakable adversity. While not everyone
will sympathize with Mr. Rittenberg’s
choices, there is no doubt that this book
"…reads like a riveting historical
novel… Sidney Rittenberg’s story
is a classic." (Mike Wallace, 60 Minutes)
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The
Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci
By Jonathan D. Spence
Elisabeth Sifton Books/Viking, 1984
A wonderful account of the 16th century Jesuit
missionary in China. As noted by Paul Robinson,
"…what [Spence] has actually written,
while still centered on Ricci, more nearly
resembles the portrait of an age, and it is
perhaps as remarkable for its form as its
content. It is organized about a series of
visual representations… that create
a richly layered and complex impression of
Ricci’s world, while also introducing
us to a conception of memory that categorically
sets that world apart from our own. It is
an extraordinary delicate achievement…Mr.
Spence’s … book is moving and
strangely beautiful." |
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The
New Emperors: China in the Era of Mao and
Deng
By Harrison Salisbury
Avon Books, New York, 1992
A dual biography of Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping
based on 20 years of first-hand research and
interviews conducted by the Pulitzer Prize
winning author. An excellent book for those
who want to understand the backgrounds and
motivations of two of the major forces in
Communist China. "Reads as much like
a popular fiction as a work of history."
(Orville Schell, The New York Times) |
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The
Private Life of Chairman Mao: The Memoirs
of Mao's Personal Physician
By Dr. Li Zhisui
Random House, New York, 1994
An incredibly revealing book about Mao, showing
him, as Ross Terrill writes, as "eccentric,
demanding, suspicious, unregretful, lascivious,
and unfailingly fascinating." While there
are those who dispute the accuracy of some
of Dr. Li’s recollections, this is the
most intimate portrait of a dictator that
we’re likely to see for some time. A
fascinating, compelling book. |
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The
Soong Dynasty
By Sterling Seagrave
Harper & Row, New York, 1985
The fascinating inside story of the Soong
family, whose power and influence had a major
impact on both China and the U.S. in the 20th
century. Of the six children of bible salesman
Charlie Soong, one married Sun Yat-sen and
later supported the Chinese Communists, one
married Chiang Kai-Shek, one married H.H.
Kung, the principal banker of Nationalist
China and the eldest son, T.V. Soong, was
the economic brains behind Chiang Kai-Shek’s
rise to power. Reads like gripping novel. |
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Tiger
on the Brink: Jiang Zemin and China's New
Elite
By Bruce Gilley
University of California Press, 1998
An insightful account of the successor to
Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping by a correspondent
for the Far Eastern Economic Review. This
book outlines how a man who had no apparent
major accomplishments made it to the top of
China’s ruling elite – and has
managed to stay there for over decade with
no end to his reign in sight. A good choice
for those seeking to understand the personal
qualities that have helped Jiang do what Mr.
Gilley contends: lead China from a Leninist
party-state to a developmental authoritarian
state, similar to some of China’s Asian
neighbors. |
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The
White-Boned Demon: A Biography of Madam Mao
Zedong
By Ross Terrill
William Morrow & Company, New York, 1984
(This book is out-of-print, but is available on barnesandnoble.com)
As Mr. Terrill says himself, "This book
tells Jiang Qing’s story through the
eloquent ‘unofficial’ voices of
China: oral eyewitness accounts from the grass
roots; testimony of those Chinese who watched,
knew, hated, or loved Jiang Qing…"
A powerful portrait of the rise and fall of
Mao’s wife, the wrathful leader of the
Cultural Revolution. |
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Wild
Swans: Three Daughters of China
By Jung Chang
Anchor Books, Doubleday, New York, 1991
A magnificent read, Wild Swans is a personal
account of three women in modern China. The
author’s grandmother was a concubine
in the early twentieth century, her mother
a communist revolutionary and she had her
life irrevocably shaped by the dramatic events
of the Cultural Revolution. A great story
and an excellent guide to understanding the
wrenching changes China has undergone in the
twentieth century. |
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Mao:
A Life
By Philip Short
A John Macrae Book, Henry Holt and Company,
2000
A tome that was seven years in production
... the definitive work on Mao to date. Exhaustive
research using materials that only recently
became available brings fascinating new detail
to a man the author notes presided over the
deaths of more of his own people than any
other leader. You may be disappointed at Short's
unwillingness to pass final judgment on the
Great Helmsman, but you will not be bored. |
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Mao
Zedong
By Jonathan D. Spence
Lipper/Viking, 1999
You can read this one cover to cover on the
New York to Beijing nonstop, and you will
likely find it more entertaining than the
movies. One of the preeminent China scholars
uses a small canvas for this work, but paints
an entertaining and insightful picture, from
Mao's private chambers where he entertained
his dancing partners to the paranoiac purges
of the cultural revolution. A must for your
reference library. |
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China Shakes the World: A Titan's Rise and Troubled Future
By James Kynge
Houghton Mifflin Company, 2006
Winner of the Financial Times / Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award, China Shakes the World is a dramatic accounting of how China's exploding growth is not only changing China, but reshaping the economies and politics of its global neighbors. This highly readable and engrossing book is based on Mr. Kynge's numerous interviews and research with players in the China drama from around the globe, including mid-western businessmen in the US who are losing manufacturing to China, Chinese immigrants in Italy who are buying up historic textile factories, factory workers in Germany whose local steel plant was dismantled and sent to China in its entirety - and the Chinese businessman who bought it. It is an excellent look at how China got to where it is today, and what this might mean for China and the world in the future.
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One Billion Customers: Lessons from the Front Lines of Doing Business in China (Wall Street Journal Book)
By James McGregor
New York, 2005
This is definitely one of the best books about doing business in China on the market today. The case studies are all fresh, intriguing and entertaining, and provide excellent insights into modern Chinese business culture. Mr. McGregor places his conclusions regarding current Chinese business practices in the context of China's history (ancient and modern) so that the lessons he imparts provide readers with a depth of understanding that is largely missing in many popular China business books. Strongly recommended. |
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Mr.
China: A Memoir
By Tim Clissold
Harper Business, 2005
A wonderfully riotous story of what can go
wrong when too much money is thrown at too
many projects with too little information,
Mr. China is Tim Clissold’s frontline
view of investing millions of Wall Street
dollars in China in the 1990s. This is a terrific
cautionary tale with good insights into the
problems that can plague foreign investors
in China. |
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Harvard
Business Review on Doing Business in China
(Harvard Business Review Paperback Series)
By Rick Yan and Kennety Lieberthal
Harvard Business School Press, 2004
"Important fundamentals…clear explanations…
humorous… comprehensive… a welcome
introduction to the rhythm and grace of Chinese
social interaction" says the Asian Wall
Street Journal of Seligman’s latest
offering. An excellent guide that will help
visiting business people interact in China
with confidence. |
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China
Streetsmart: What You MUST Know to be Effective
and Profitable in China
By John Chan
Prentiss Hall, 2003
Although the constant promotion of the “China Streetsmart way” is tedious and distracting, this book does provide useful case studies of foreign companies operating in China that demonstrate how the complexities of doing business in China can be handled to create profitable operations. |
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Chinese
Business Etiquette: A Guide to Protocol,
Manners, and Culture in the People's Republic
of China
By Scott D. Seligman
Warner Books, 1999
"Important fundamentals…clear
explanations… humorous… comprehensive…
a welcome introduction to the rhythm and
grace of Chinese social interaction"
says the Asian Wall Street Journal of Seligman’s
latest offering. An excellent guide that
will help visiting business people interact
in China with confidence. |
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Wen
and The Art of Doing Business in China
By Daniel R. Joseph
Cultural Dragon, 2001
An excellent guide for those seeking to establish
operations in more remote parts of China.
Mr. Joseph presents a compelling narrative
of the impact that culture ("wen"
in Chinese) has on doing business in China's
less-developed areas. |
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The
New Silk Road: Secrets of Business Success
in China Today
By John B. Stuttard
John Wiley & Sons, 2000
A very helpful book of China business case
studies contributed by the China executives
from companies such as Johnson & Johnson,
Bayer, Novartis, Unilever, Lucent and United
Technologies. Provides solid lessons on setting
goals, choosing partners and steps you can
take to reduce uncertainty. |
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Behind
the Open Door: Foreign Enterprises in the
Chinese Marketplace
By Daniel H. Rosen
Institute for International Economics, 1999
Drawing on extensive interviews with expatriate
managers and other professionals currently
working in China, Mr. Rosen analyzes and provides
helpful conclusions on each step of running
a business in China. Excellent reading for
managers responsible both for investment and
operational issues in China. |
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The China
Business Handbook 2002
By China Economic Review
Alain Charles Publishing, 2002
A thorough guide to every region in China,
complete with color maps, key economic data,
information on major companies in the area,
investment incentives, infrastructure, and
economic and industrial zones. Tips on places
to stay and things to do are included as well.
An excellent resource for the business person
seeking to learn more about what the different
regions of China have to offer. |
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China
Dawn: The Story of a Technology and Business
Revolution
By David Sheff
HarperBusiness, 2002
A fascinating portrait of two entrepreneurs
swept up in China's high-tech revolution.
This fast-paced book gives readers a real
sense of the forces that are driving business
in China today -- and radically changing Chinese
culture in the process. |
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Beijing
Jeep: A Case Study of Western Business in
China
By Jim Mann
Westview Press, 1997
A compelling chronicle of American Motors
Corporation’s failure in China. While
it is a bit dated, it is still an excellent
case study for those considering, or preparing
to manage, a Sino-foreign operation in China. |
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History and Foreign Affairs |
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A
Great Wall: Six Presidents and China: An Investigate
History
By Patrick Tyler
A Century Foundation Book, 1999
US relations with China from Nixon through
Clinton, as seen through the eyes of the former
Beijing Bureau Chief for The New York Times.
A must read for anyone who seeks to understand
the complexity of current Sino/US relations
... exhaustively researched ... punchy journalistic
style makes for entertaining reading ... pulls
no punches. |
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About
Face: A History of America's Curious Relationship
with China, From Nixon to Clinton
By James Mann
Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1999
A fascinating, detailed chronicle of America’s
efforts to cultivate China through the administrations
of six American presidents. Through interviews
with many of the major U.S. players and extensive
research into recently declassified documents,
former Beijing bureau chief for the Los Angeles
Times James Mann brings "to life the
story of U.S.-China relations by reconstructing
the process and the politics through the personalities,
internal debates, calculations, and dilemmas
of policymakers." (Robert A. Manning,
Far Eastern Economic Review) |
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China:
A New History
By John King Fairbank and Merle Goldman
Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1998
A concise and authoritative account of China
and its people over four thousand years by
one of the leading China scholars of the 20th
century. Updated by Merle Goldman after Fairbank’s
death to include a chapter on events in the
post-Mao Period, the book now includes a detailed
account of the vast array of changes that
have occurred in China over the past twenty
years. |
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China
Wakes: The Struggle for the Soul of a Rising
Power
By Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl Wudunn
Random House, New York, 1995
A great read, China Wakes is the story
of China’s transformation into an
economic and political power by Pulitzer
Prize-winning husband and wife reporters
for The New York Times. Limited in that
it draws mainly on interviews with intellectuals
in Beijing, the book is engaging and educational
nonetheless.
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East
and West: China, Power, and the Future of
Asia
By Christopher Patten
Times Books/Random House, New York, 1998
An intriguing account by the Last Governor
of Hong Kong. Writing in the New York Times,
Jack F. Matlock describes Patten’s book
as "…a beguiling mixture of memoir
and maxim, of well-chosen anecdote and pithy
analysis, of experience and erudition. The
result is that rarest of literary products:
a book that is as delightful to read as it
is enlightening to ponder." |
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The
Great Wall and the Empty Fortress: China's
Search for Security
By Andrew Nathan and Robert S. Ross
W.W. Norton & Company, New York, 1997
"Nathan and Ross issue a needed
corrective to some of the more outlandish
claims of those who stress the "China
threat." ... Nathan and Ross also cut
through the arcane debate over the actual
size of the Chinese military budget to demonstrate
just how severely limited Beijing's current
capabilities are.... Actually, the most interesting
feature of their argument is not their differences
with the hardliners, but their similarities
to them." (Benjamin Schwarz, The New
York Times Book Review)
"There
is a tendency in the Western media to depict
mainland China as an inscrutable monolith.
Political scientists Nathan and Ross, however,
put a very different face on China and its
leadership. Though at the height of its power
and influence, China, the authors argue, sees
itself threatened politically, economically,
and militarily. It is this fear--and the importance
of saving face--that drives Chinese foreign
policy, and Nathan and Ross examine how these
and related forces have affected China's dealings
with nations, from the time of Mao to the
present… The authors' argument that
the West fully integrate China into the world
community is convincing and pragmatic. A thoughtful
examination of what will surely be one of
the twenty-first century's great powers."
(Brian McCombie, Booklist ) |
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The
Kissinger Transcripts
Edited by William Burr
The New Press, New York, 1999
For readers who like the fly-on-the-wall view
of history, these almost verbatim transcripts
offer a rare chance to listen in on Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger’s 1971-1976
meetings with Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai, Leonid
Brezhnev and others as he works to play Beijing
and Moscow against each other. |
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The
Search for Modern China
By Jonathan D. Spence
W.W. Norton Company, New York, 1990
This is the definitive guide book for those
seeking to better understand China’s
search for identity in the modern world. Spence
takes the reader on an engaging, highly readable
tour of four centuries of Chinese history,
from the fall of the Ming dynasty in 1600
through the crushed democracy movement in
June 1989. China’s troubled journey
from bureaucratic empire to modern nation-state
is revealed through those who have been a
part of the struggle to define China’s
identity: emperors and bureaucrats, intellectuals
and peasants, men and women, foreigners and
locals. |
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Integrating
China into the Global Economy
By Nicholas R. Lardy
Brookings Institution Press, 2002
An excellent analysis of the internal and
external pressures on the Chinese government
to comply with the standards of therules-based
World Trade Organization. Lardy points out
that, prior to entry into the WTO, China enjoyed
high growth rates and more foreign direct
investment than any other emerging economy.
He draws on a wealth of scholarship and experience
to explain how China's leaders expect to leverage
the increased foreign competition that will
be created by its WTO commitments to further
its domestic reform agenda. |
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China's
Economic Challenge: Smashing the Iron Rice
Bowl
By Neil C. Hughes
M.E. Sharpe, 2002
"..a wealth
of solid factual information, profound insights
and relevant historical perspective"
says Pieter Bottelier of Johns Hopkins University.
"Not only are the perspectives new, but
they exude wonder and enthusiasm..."
says Lucien Pye. While his outlook is pessimistic,
Mr. Hughes does a good job of outlining the
complexities of China's economic revolution
and its impact on the Chinese people and their
leaders. |
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Big
Dragon: China's Future: What it Means for
Business, the Economy and the Global Order
By Daniel Burstein and Arne DeKeijzer
Simon & Schuster, New York, 1998
A well-written analysis of the challenges
and opportunities posed by China in this new
century. The authors provide a useful perspective
on China’s many contradictions. While
taking into account China’s authoritarian
government and poor record on human rights,
the authors conclude that the Chinese people
themselves have put China on an irreversible
path towards a pluralistic economy and possibly
even a form of democracy. This book offers
rich portraits of Chinese entrepreneuers and
others that are helping to shape a new China.
"…one of the most interesting popular
books on China in several years…"
(John Pomfret, The Washington Post Book World) |
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China's
Unfinished Economic Revolution
By Nicholas R. Lardy
Brookings Institution Press, 1998
"China’s ability to complete
successful reform of its banking system
is central to the question of whether China
will be able to sustain high economic growth.
Nick Lardy’s book is the most detailed
and authoritative study to date of the current
state of Chinese banking and of the reforms
that are required. Anyone interested in
the Chinese reform challenges that still
lie ahead will want to read this book."
(Dwight H. Perkins, Harvard University)
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Rural
China Takes Off: Institutional Foundations
of Economic Reform
By Jean C. Oi
University of California Press, Berkeley,
1999
An illuminating look at one of the lesser
known but more important facts about China’s
twenty years of economic reform: rural industrialization
is largely responsible for China’s remarkable
economic growth. Rural factories account for
at least one third of China’s GDP and
one third of China’s exports. In this
fascinating book Jean Oi, director of the
Center for East Asian Studies at Stanford
University, successfully explains the reasons
behind this rural phenomenon, including "local
state corporatism" in which local officials
play a leading role in developing rural areas.
An important book for anyone seeking to understand
one of China’s major growth engines. |
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Zouping
in Transition: The Process of Reform in Rural
North China
By Andrew G. Walder
Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1997
An excellent case study in "local state
corporatism" based on research by several
American researchers who were allowed to live
in Zouping County in northern China between
1988 and 1993. This book demonstrates in a
concrete way the good that can come to a community
when local officials have the proper incentives.
The evidence presented here is a direct challenge
to those who advocate rapid privatization
and the removal of officials from all economic
activity. A very useful tool for those seeking
to better understand the implementation of
China’s economic reforms and what it
means at the local level. |
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China Road: A Journey into the Future of a Rising Power
By Rob Gifford
Random House, 2007
Gifted storyteller and NPR reporter Rob Gifford offers his unique insights on modern China as he traverses its vast and changing landscape from Shanghai to Xinjiang along Route 312. Through conversations with locals he encounters en route, he uncovers the struggles and successes of their daily lives, and offers his thoughts on what the future may bring to a country with such a diverse array of stress points. Issues range from the growing economic gap between coastal urbanites and rural farmers to the weakening push for political independence in Tibet and Xinjiang. This highly enjoyable read provides a rare glimpse into the diversity and complexity of today’s China. |
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China
Dawn: The Story of a Technology and Business
Revolution
By David Sheff
HarperBusiness, 2002
A fascinating portrait of two entrepreneurs
swept up in China's high-tech revolution.
This fast-paced book gives readers a real
sense of the forces that are driving business
in China today -- and radically changing Chinese
culture in the process. |
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River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze
By Peter Hessler
Harper Perennial, 2001
River Town is a personal account of a young American Peace Corps volunteer who teaches English and American literature to rural college students in the remote Sichuanese town of Fuling. Arriving with little knowledge of Chinese language or culture, Hessler details the seemingly countless difficulties that foreigners often encounter upon entering this vastly different land, as well as some uncommon situations. The more notable obstacles involve maneuvering around local political censorship and neighborhood gossip networks. His students provide glimpses into Chinese thought through their writings, while the town tries to keep the foreigner at a distance. Over his two years there, both he and the town grow to accept each other through compromise and understanding, though neither ultimately changes. |
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New
Shanghai: The Rocky Rebirth of China's Legendary
City
By Pamela Yatsko
John Wiley and Sons, 2000
Pam Yatsko's book is a terrific contribution
to the understanding of modern Shanghai -
and China by extension. The reader is treated
to a wealth of personal stories that Ms. Yatsko
collected over her several years of living
in Shanghai. While many writers tend to focus
on the sensational, Ms. Yatsko examines what
is really happening in people's lives and
why. She has taken the Chinese economic policies
that appear to most people as nothing more
than news blips in the Wall Street Journal
or New York Times, and shown how they have
dramatically changed lives in modern China
- bringing enormous rewards for some, significant
hardship for others. |
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China
Pop: How Soap Operas, Tabloids, and Bestsellers
are Transforming a Culture
By Jianyang Zha
New Press, 1995
A stimulating look at China’s young
intellectuals and the dramatic cultural changes
that have taken place in recent years. An
excellent piece of literary journalism that
gives the reader a fascinating perspective
on the changes wrought by China’s economic
reforms. |
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Golden
Arches East: McDonald's in East Asia
Edited by James L. Watson
Stanford University Press, Stanford, 1997
A fascinating and engaging study that explores
the role of McDonald’s in five Asian
economies. The authors seek to understand
how countries react to McDonald’s
and what that interaction says about those
countries. They conclude that McDonald’s
has had a huge impact on Asia, changing
people’s lives in some fundamental
ways. For example, McDonald’s has
been credited by Hong Kong natives with
raising the standards of cleanliness in
public restrooms and spreading the concept
of waiting in line. Recommended for those
who want a well-rounded exploration of the
issues relating to globalization and suspected
American cultural imperialism. |
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