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Beijing Page 20

by Linda Jaivin


  p. 163 ‘Yet that year the photographer Xu Yong . . .’. See Jaime FlorCruz, ‘China’s Capital Still Getting Kick from 2008 Olympic Party’, 2 July 2012, http://edition.cnn.com.

  p. 168 Wang Jun, ‘Qing liuxia Liang Sicheng, Lin Huiyin guju’ (‘Please Leave Be the Historic Home of Liang Shicheng and Lin Huiyin’), City-Eye, http://blog.sina.com.cn/wangjun, 10 July 2009.

  p. 185 ‘The Nezha myth became entwined . . .’. David Der-wei Wang is quoted in Dong, Republican Beijing, p. 301.

  p. 187 ‘In the twisting, teeming lanes . . .’. The descriptions of performers including ‘Pockmark’ Cao and the South City Amusement Park are drawn from the illustrated book on old Qianmen by Yang Xin, Da Qianmen Wai (Outside Qianmen Gate) (Beijing, 2003).

  p. 188 ‘According to the writer Wang Jie . . .’. See Wang Jie, Touguo jianzhu kan huangcheng guyun (Looking at the Imperial City through Architecture) (Beijing, 2008), p. 140.

  p. 190 ‘Given that the song was written in 1947 . . .’. See ‘Alishande guniang’ (‘Girl from Alishan’), www.baike.baidu.com.

  p. 192 ‘As Pierre Ryckmans (Simon Leys) has observed . . .’. The essay was originally delivered as a Morrison Lecture at the Australian National University in 1986 and is republished in Simon Leys [Pierre Ryckmans], Hall of Uselessness (Melbourne, 2011), p. 252.

  p. 198 ‘It was 1958 before the project got under way . . .’. All details of the secret history of Beijing’s subway, including how it was tested with nuclear weapons, come from Sang Ye and Barmé, ‘Beijing Underground: An Invisible City’.

  p. 203 ‘So have the wells . . .’. See Andreas N. Angelakis et al., Evolution of Water Supply through the Millennia (London, 2012), p. 187.

  p. 204–5 ‘Drought is not a new problem . . .’. Kangxi quoted and translated in Hok-Lam Chan, Legends of the Building of Old Peking (Hong Kong, 2008), p. 120.

  p. 206 ‘There are controversial plans . . .’. See Tom Hancock, ‘Water-starved Beijing Looks to the Sea’, www.smartplanet.com, 27 October 2011.

  p. 216 ‘It turned out that renting Segways . . .’. All references to Lawrence Liauw are from his ‘Urbanization of Post-Olympic Beijing’, in Sustain and Develop: 306090 Books vol. 13, ed. Joshua Bolchover and Jonathan D. Solomon (2010), at www.306090.com.

  p. 219 ‘It was designed by Rem Koolhaas . . .’. All quotations from Martin Filler are from his article ‘The Master of Bigness’, New York Review of Books (10 May 2012), www.nybooks.com.

  p. 220 ‘The Asian Wall Street Journal . . .’. Ron Gluckman’s writing on Beijing architecture for the Asian Wall Street Journal and Asiaweek can be found at www.gluckman.com.

  p. 232 ‘His trove included . . .’. See Liu Yong et al., Beijing lishi wenhua shiwu jiang, p. 56.

  p. 235 ‘Their disciples included . . .’. Ibid., pp. 62–3.

  p. 236 ‘As a result, as Geremie Barmé has written . . .’. This essay relies heavily on Geremie Barmé, ‘Prince Gong’s Folly’, China Heritage Quarterly, XII (2007), www.chinaheritagequarterly.org.

  Suggested Reading and Viewing

  Books

  Barmé, Geremie, The Forbidden City (London, 2008). The ultimate guide to the palace, its architecture and its history

  Becker, Jasper, City of Heavenly Tranquillity (Oxford and New York, 2008). A veteran China journalist on the city, its history and its people

  Bredon, Juliet, Peking (Shanghai, 1919). An elegant and informed portrait of the city and its places and customs written in the early twentieth century by a long-time resident

  Chen Yongxiang and Hao Li, Old Streets in Beijing (Beijing, 2006). A bilingual, charmingly illustrated book about the old Beijing of commemorative arches, hutong, temples and courtyard homes

  French, Paul, Midnight in Peking (Melbourne, 2011). The seamy side of foreign life on the eve of the Japanese invasion

  Haw, Stephen G., Beijing: A Concise History (London, 2007). Just what the title promises: a concise history

  Hok-Lam Chan, Legends of the Building of Old Peking (Hong Kong, 2008). Scholarly, somewhat esoteric, but fascinating: the source on Beijing’s ‘astral geography’ and all things Nezha

  Johnston, Reginald Fleming, Twilight in the Forbidden City (London, 1934). A first-person account by the tutor of the last emperor, Henry Puyi

  Kates, George N., The Years that were Fat: The Last of Old China (Cambridge, MA, and London, 1952). An intelligent, sensitive and beautifully composed appreciation of Beijing in the 1930s

  Lao She, Camel Xiangzi, trans. Shi Xiaoqing (Beijing, 1988). A classic novel of Beijing – as are all of Lao She’s works, which so beautifully capture both the Beijing language and sensibility. Various editions abound (Camel Xiangzi is translated elsewhere as Rickshaw Boy)

  Lin Haiyin, My Memories of Old Beijing, trans. Nancy Ing and Chi Pang-yuan (Hong Kong, 1992). A much-loved novel of hutong life in the first half of the twentieth century as seen through a young girl’s eyes

  Meyer, Michael, The Last Days of Old Beijing: Life in the Vanishing Backstreets of a City Transformed (New York, 2008; new edn with afterword, 2009). A personal, impeccably researched account of the destruction of the old ‘Chinese City’ south of Qianmen

  Spence, Jonathan, Emperor of China: Self-portrait of K’ang-Hi (New York, 1975). A scholarly, imaginative recreation of the life of one of the greatest inhabitants of the Forbidden City by a leading historian of China

  Films

  Bertolucci, Bernardo, dir., The Last Emperor (1987). It’s not perfect history but it is filmed in the Forbidden City and is full of atmosphere

  Chen Kaige, dir., Farewell My Concubine (1993). A sweeping historical epic that follows the fate of two boys raised to be Peking Opera singers and evokes Beijing from the Republican era to Maoist times and beyond. Co-winner of the Palme d’Or at the Cannes International Film Festival in 1993

  Gordon, Richard, and Carma Hinton, dirs, Gate of Heavenly Peace (1995). Award-winning documentary on the events of 1989

  Jiang Wen, dir., In the Heat of the Sun (1994). A superb adaption of Wang Shuo’s novel Wild Beast, about disaffected youth in Beijing in the final years of the Cultural Revolution

  Wang Xiaoshuai, dir., Beijing Bicycle (2001). A migrant worker from the countryside goes in search of a stolen bicycle. Winner of the Jury Grand Prix at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2001

  Online

  For up-to-date listings on what’s happening in Beijing, as well as where to eat, shop and find entertainment, see:

  The Beijinger

  www.thebeijinger.com

  City Weekend Guide

  www.cityweekend.com.cn/beijing

  The Secret Guide to Alternative Beijing

  www.alternativebeijing.com

  That’s Beijing

  www.thatsmags.com/beijing

  Time Out Beijing

  www.timeoutbeijing.com

  Acknowledgements

  I am extremely grateful to Professor Geremie Barmé of the Australian National University and his Federation Fellowship project ‘Beijing: China’s Heritage and the City as Spectacle’ for generous financial and practical support for this book. I thank the Australian National University School of Culture, History and Language in the ANU College of Asia and the Pacific for making me a Research Affiliate, and thus giving me access to the ANU’s priceless library collections related to Beijing. RMIT University and the CAL (Creative Agency Ltd) Cultural Fund provided me with a month-long residency in Melbourne and access to university resources there. Geremie Barmé, Jeremy Goldkorn of Danwei.com, Kathy Bail, veteran Beijing correspondent Jane Macartney (a direct descendant of England’s first emissary to Beijing, Lord Macartney) and Red Gate Gallery owner Brian Wallace all kindly read drafts or partial drafts of the manuscript and offered valuable suggestions and comments. Jeanne Moore graciously made available her extraordinary collection of old photographs and albums. Qin Taozi and Lois Conner, both of whom have devoted much of their brilliant careers to documenting this city, have been very generous in providing photographs. Dan
Sanderson, Eveline Sun and Emma Johnston all contributed invaluably to the research, and Emma took a number of photographs for the book as well. Jade Muratore, Samantha Sperring and Naomi Jaivin (my mother), put in many hours typing corrections into the manuscript. Finally, I’d like to thank my tireless agent, Gaby Naher, and my patient, persistent and dedicated editors at Reaktion Books, Vivian Constantinopoulos and Aimee Selby.

  Photo Acknowledgements

  The author and publishers wish to express their thanks to the below sources of illustrative material and/or permission to reproduce it.

  ahenobarbus: p. 223; © Trustees of the British Museum, London: p. 38; Lois Conner: pp. 10–11, 89, 123, 155, 157, 160, 162, 165; Corbis: pp. 16–17 (Gavin Hellier/JAI), 114 (Baldwin H. Ward & Kathryn C. Ward), 116, 137 (Bettmann), 144–5 (Peter Turnley); courtesy of Cui Jian: p. 142; das farbamt: p. 222; Charlie Fong: pp. 208, 218–19; Getty Images: p. 127; © Guan Wei: p. 149; image courtesy of the Historical Photographs of China © 2008 Penelope Fowler (http://hpc.vcea.net): p. 46; iStockphoto: pp. 60–61 (bjdlzx); Linda Jaivin: pp. 8–9, 18, 23, 24, 27, 28, 31, 33, 34, 37, 40, 50–51, 52, 62, 82, 85, 87, 108–9, 141, 172, 174, 175, 177, 182, 184, 190, 191, 194, 201, 214, 215, 217, 229, 230; Emma Johnston: pp. 13, 67, 232, 233, 234, 235, 238; Michael Leaman: pp. 227, 237; Library of Congress, Washington, DC: pp. 74–5, 79, 90–91, 94, 95, 96, 99, 107, 120; National Archives, Washington, DC: p. 133; Qin Taozi: pp. 6–7, 147, 152, 163, 168–9, 213; Ran and Hat600: p. 198; Rex Features: pp. 128 (courtesy Everett Collection), 140 (Grace/Keystone USA); Dan Sanderson: pp. 70–71, 124–5, 167, 205; Shizhao: pp. 49, 77; Shutterstock: pp. 12 (testing), 59 (Max Studio), 135 (Mario Savola), 180 (Nadby Aizat); Victoria & Albert Museum, London: p. 84; Wang Jinlang (dir.), Beijing Besieged by Waste, image courtesy of the dGenerate Collection at Icarus Films, www.icarusfilms.com: p. 164; WiNG: p. 221; © Xu Bing Studio: pp. 14–15; Zhangzhe0101: pp. 44–5

  Index

  Page numbers in italics refer to illustrations

  Ah Xian (artist) 214

  Ahema (Ahmed Benaketi) 54

  Ai Qing (poet) 119, 123, 137

  Ai Weiwei (artist) 136, 207, 211, 217

  Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads 158

  Gangnam Style pony dance 158–9

  airport 139–40, 156

  Altan Khan 68–9

  Andingmen (Peace Stabilized Gate) 195

  artists and galleries 207–14

  exiled artists’ return 214–15

  history 210–12

  suppression and re-emergence (1990s) 213–14

  see also individual artists and galleries

  Asian Games (1990) 146, 155

  Babaoshan (Eight Treasure Mountain)

  Beijing Revolutionaries’ Cemetery 118

  Eunuchs’ Temple 63, 118

  Zhou Enlai’s funeral 134–5

  Badlands 107, 111, 112

  Baiyun Guan (White Cloud Temple) 32, 35

  bars and cafés 247, 252–4

  see also restaurants

  Bei Dao (poet) 136, 143

  Bei Tang (Northern Cathedral) destruction 93

  Beihai (North Lake) Park 42, 59, 104, 131, 245

  food drops (1946) 113

  Hortensia Isle see Hortensia Isle as Nezha’s stomach 202

  Stars artist group exhibition 211–12

  Studio of the Quiet Heart 88

  Taiye (Beihai) Pond 36, 45

  Tuancheng (Circular City) 81

  Beijing Bastards (Zhang) 146–50

  Beijing Besieged by Waste (Wang) 164, 164

  Beijing Books Building 256

  Beijing Capital Museum 241–2

  Beijing Design Week 177

  Beijing Revolutionaries’ Cemetery 118

  Beijing Spirit 170

  Beijing Spring 136–7

  Beijing Television Cultural Centre 220, 221

  Beijing Urban Planning Exhibition Hall 241

  Beiping, Beijing as 56, 57, 110, 112–14

  Beizongbu Hutong 167–70

  Bell Tower 55–6, 57, 156, 180, 183

  see also Drum Tower neighbourhood

  Beresford, Bruce, Mao’s Last Dancer 129

  Bian Zhongyun 127

  bicycles, Chang’an Avenue 140

  Big Underpants (China Central Television, CCTV) 218–20

  ‘Bird’s Nest’ National Stadium 156, 216, 217, 217

  Blue Kite (Tian) 129

  bookshops 134, 188, 189, 256

  Boxer Rebellion 92–7, 96, 159–61

  Buddhism 32–3, 36, 65

  Dalai Lama 76, 122

  Lama Temple see Lama Temple

  Bumming in Beijing (Wu) 146

  cafés and bars 247, 252–4

  see also restaurants

  Caishikou (Vegetable Markets) execution ground 20, 92, 196–7

  Cao Xueqin see Dream of the Red Chamber

  Caochangdi Village 207

  Central Park 101

  Chan, Jackie 156

  Chang’an Avenue 121, 185, 196

  as Architectural Hall of Shame 223

  bicycles 140

  pailou (arches), destruction of 120

  pro-democracy demonstration 146

  Stars artist group march 211

  Chaodou (Fried Beans) Hutong 176

  Chaoyang

  1949 – The Hidden City 251

  Backyard café 252

  Baoyuan Jiaozi Wu restaurant 249–50

  Bookworm café 253

  Café CD Blues 247

  Chaoyang Theatre 248

  Destination (gay bar) 253

  Eyeglasses City 256

  Grace Beijing hotel 240

  Guanfu Museum 242

  Jiuxianqiao see Jiuxianqiao Opposite House 222, 240

  Panjiayuan flea market 254

  Sanlitun see Sanlitun Silk Markets 254

  Timezone 8 bar 253

  Zhong Ba Lou (Middle 8)

  restaurant 251

  Chegongzhuang

  Matteo Ricci tomb 196

  Mei Lanfang Theatre 83, 196, 246

  Chen Danqing (artist) 153

  Chen Duxiu (founding member, Communist Party of China) 103

  Chen Kaige, Farewell My Concubine 129, 129, 136, 150

  Chen Xitong, Mayor 150

  Chen Zhanxiang (architect) 119, 123, 154

  Chiang Kai-shek 110–11

  China Art Gallery (National Art Museum of China) 211, 214

  ‘No U-Turn’ exhibition 212–13, 215, 241

  China Central Television (CCTV, Big Underpants) 218–20

  China Construction Bank 223

  Chongwenmen (Hadamen) Gate 197

  Christians

  and Boxer Rebellion 92–3

  Jesuits see Jesuits

  cinemas

  Megabox 248

  UME Huaxing International Cineplex 248

  CITIC Building 139

  Cixi, Empress Dowager 88–92, 97, 139, 176, 235

  Boxer Rebellion siege 93–5

  marble boat 89, 89, 245

  tomb looted 102

  see also Summer Palace

  cloisonné 65, 110

  Communist Party of China anniversary celebrations 123–4, 124, 140–41

  Anti-Rightist Movement 122–3, 129, 136

  British embassy burning 130

  city walls’ demolition 119

  Communist Mansions as urban communes 123

  environmental clean-up 117

  free markets 138–9

  Gang of Four 135, 136

  Great Leap Forward 123, 126, 198

  heritage site restoration (1980s) 139

  hutong renaming 117, 127

  industrial output 120–21, 123, 124, 130

  infrastructure improvements and Ring Roads 139–40, 141, 151, 164

  internal migration restrictions (1980s) 140

  land rights sales and corruption (1990s) 150–53

  lao zihao (famous old brands), nationalization of 118

  Legation Quarter conversion 122

  Palace Museum’s first exhi
bition 118

  Party School 118

  patriotic education campaign (1989) 146

  People’s Liberation Army (PLA) 143–6

  political ties and UN seat 134

  pro-democracy protest movement (1991) 129, 143–6, 144–5, 153, 185

  Red Guards see Red Guards reforms 136–53

  reservoir building 123

  social engineering 117–19

  social and wealth divide (1980s) 143

  tertiary education institutions 122

  tourism, foreign 134, 146

  underground shelters 131–2, 146

  urban planning 118–20

  worker accommodation 121, 138

  see also Cultural Revolution; Mao Zedong

  Confucian Temple 35, 50–52, 52

  Confucianism, criticism of 103–4, 161

  Confucius statue, Tiananmen Square 161

  conservation 151–3, 165–70, 177, 192–3

  Cui Jian (rock star) 141–2, 142, 143, 146

  Cultural Revolution 126–8, 127–8, 135, 150, 185, 196

  current depiction 159

  film-making about 129

  leaders’ trials 137

  No-Names artists 211

  slogans, 798

  Space gallery 207, 208

  see also Communist Party; Mao Zedong

  Dalai Lama 76, 122 see also Buddhism

  Daoism 32, 35, 65, 118

  Dashila’r 81, 93, 96–7, 113, 117–18, 147, 177, 230, 244

  dazayuan 106, 121, 161, 162, 176–7

  Democracy Wall, Xidan 136, 137

  Deng Xiaoping 126, 136–7, 138, 141, 143, 213

  Dialogue (Tang and Xiao) 213, 215

  Diaoyutai (Fishing Terrace) 37, 123, 126

  Dong Tang (Eastern Cathedral) destruction 93

  Dongbianmen, Red Gate Gallery 154, 213–14

  Dongzhimen gate 132, 197–8

  douzhi 230

  Dragon’s Vein see Zhengyangmen

  Dream of the Red Chamber (Cao) 21, 85–6, 102–3, 121, 134, 231 as TV series (Li) 164

  Drum Tower neighbourhood 173–9

  Bell Tower 55–6, 57, 156, 180, 183

  cafés and bars 252–3

  dazayuan (tenements) 176–7

  Drum Tower, view from 184

  famous past residents 176

  mendun (door stone) 176

 

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