Incoming!!
April 30th, 2008
See this really good article in theĀ NY Times titled, Chinese Students in U.S. Fight View of Their Home.
You need to read this article, not with the assignment of agreeing or disagreeing with the activity in question, but because an educated person digs deeper and always asks the “why?” to try to get at the root cause behind such human behavior.
Reading this article will also help you better understand a cultural difference and way of looking at the world that is different from ours. For that quiet student from China who sat in the front or back row in one of your undergraduate or graduate courses, and you made the mistake of not reaching out to him/her, this article gives you some insight as to how he/she may have had to bite their tongue as current events came up and were being discussed in their American college or graduate school classroom.
This article also dovetails nicely into some of the things I will speak to you about when we hit the ground running in China at our first on-the-road class meeting.
It also directly ties into the following book you might enjoy reading by Hanes and Sanello if you are a history buff, The Opium Wars: The Addiction of One Empire and the Corruption of Another (2004). Said book points out that these two wars (which the Chinese resoundingly lost) and the opium/drug running trade by the British in China (how many of you knew the British were once major drug runners who made today’s Columbian drug cartel look like lemonade stand pharmacists?), continue to have geopolitical reverberations for all of us, well over 150 years later. Part of what we see spilling out in classrooms such as the USC classroom described in the above article harken back to what happened in China between roughly 1830 and 1860.
You now have built up a base and learned enough about China in this course (or should have) so that you can start to connect the dots like the one I note above.
And watch out for those incoming water bottles.
Entry Filed under: Pre-Departure, Beijing, China
1 Comment Add your own
1. Simeon Trieu | May 10th, 2008 at 9:34 pm
Even more so than Americans are of America, the Chinese are passionate about China. In America, we have varying backgrounds (ie. ethnic, religious, or what have you), and the simple truth is that not everyone who comes here has a national culture they can identify with. It is the melting pot. Just about the only common point is that we share the same language, government, and air.
China has suffered a lot from the Western powers, and has made great progress. It is something to be commended, but they still have a lot of ground to cover in human rights, healthcare, and censorship, for example.
As for the Western news conflicting with Chinese news reports, don’t believe everything you read/hear/see. If we learn anything from the Tbtan uprising and the media, the truth is always somewhere in the middle. You have to discern it for yourself based on the biased reports from both sides.
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