For a different take on China it is worth reading Troy Parfitt’s
book - Why China Will Never Rule The World: Travels in the Two Chinas . This is
not a book about facts and figures and neither is it a hymn to Chinese economic
success. As the blurb tells us, the book is mostly travelogue told from an
outsider's perspective, albeit an outsider who lived in Taiwan for ten years
and who speaks Mandarin.
Three quotes may give a flavour of the writer’s standpoint.
China is a nation of
much fakery; there’s fake sushi, fake steak, fake gravy, fake music, fake
goods, fake pharmaceuticals, fake news, fake weather reports, fake education,
fake rights, fake laws, fake courts, fake judges, a fake congress, a fake
constitution….
Unambiguous but not unconsidered. Parfitt thinks there are profound
influences behind the fakery – a deep-rooted preference for appearances over reality. The
second quote concerns a China Central Television (CCTV) show the writer
watched from one of his hotel rooms.
That night on CCTV, a
panel of Chinese scientists was explaining how the Americans had never landed
on the moon. Not only were the lunar missions faked, they said, but the Apollo
program itself was largely a matter of science fiction. The shadows were all
wrong. Where were the craters? And just look at that ridiculous flag – not
moving even with solar winds. Their tone was both mocking and disdainful, as if
even having to explain why this was the biggest fraud of all time insulted
their very intelligence.
CCTV is the main state broadcaster in China. The third quote is taken from a conversation with a taxi
driver.
“Food in China is
packed with shit – shit that will make you sick and kill you. I have a
daughter, you know. I’m worried about what she eats. But what am I supposed to
do? Complain? Yeah, right. The government would say, ‘Well, that’s very
interesting, sir. Why don’t we take a walk and talk about it? Please, tell us
whatever it is that’s on your mind.’ And then they’d shoot me in the back of
the neck. Bang! And that would be the end of that.”
Obviously an entire country cannot be dismissed on the basis of a single
taxi driver's complaints, however chilling they are. However there are many
more examples highlighting what Parfitt sees as endemic weaknesses in Chinese
culture. For example he sees Confucianism as a significant cultural problem
with its emphasis on obedience and harmony.
The book is easy to read and although Parfitt can come
across as someone who simply does not like China and the Chinese, he tells us
quite clearly why that is. In so doing he provides an interesting and accessible cultural
alternative to the usual facts, figures and technology.
3 comments:
The best story from China is a bloke asking his girlfriend for a little 69.
She says that she's not in the mood for cooking...
da da............
"Obviously an entire country cannot be dismissed on the basis of a single taxi driver's complaints, however chilling they are"
I guess he wasn't driving one of these taxis:
https://twitter.com/dwnews/status/1018535916078592001
Scrobs - What do you call a Chinese Paralympian? Lim Ping.
Dave - I guess not. Round here buses have CCTV, don't know it that is UK wide though.
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