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Chinese History - Social Aspects, Asian Studies - East Asia - China
Chinese by Jasper Becker β€” book cover

Chinese

by Jasper Becker
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Overview

China's 1.25 billion people comprise nearly a quarter of the world's population. More people live in China than in North America, the European Union, and the former Soviet countries combined. But what do we really know about these millions of people? And what is the future of their frequently misunderstood, increasingly powerful country?

In The Chinese, Jasper Becker, China's premier resident western correspondent, strips the country of its myths and captures the Chinese as they really live. For nearly two decades Becker has lived in China, and reported from areas where western journalists are forbidden. His award-winning Hungry Ghosts, hailed for its brutal honesty in the west, was banned in China.

Here Becker is more candid still, reporting from all over the country: from the tiny, crowded homes of the swollen megalopolises of the southeast rim to a vast, secret network of thousands of defense bunkers in the northwest. He exposes Chinese society in layers from the bottom upward: from remote, illiterate peasants; to the rising classes of businessmen; to local despots; to the twenty grades of Party apparatchiks; to the dominant, comparatively small caste of party leaders who are often ignorant of the people they rule.

Becker lets the Chinese speak for themselves, in voices that are rich and moving. We meet such characters as Nian Guangjiu, an aspiring entrepreneur who sold melon seeds, and was arrested for "corruption," "misuse of public funds," and "hooliganism" over the course of his career, before finally being named in 1998 as one of ninety-six "Heroes of Reform"; and Li Xiaohua, the first man in China to buy a Ferrari, who was arrested for peddling watches before a hair-restoring potion made him a millionaire. He met his wife, the daughter of a senior general, when she took pity on him because he could not afford bus fare.

We also learn a great deal about the magnitude -- and the false face -- of China's vaunted economic boom. In the Guangdong province we meet Mrs. Qin, a member of the Zhuang people, just one of China's fifty-five identified ethnic minorities. Half of the children in her province are malnourished; ninety percent have chronic worm infections.

Institutionalized crime, Becker shows, is one result of this breathtaking poverty, and smuggling in China is big business; a sting in Hainan -- one of China's "special economic zones" -- revealed a single shadow company that had illegally imported 89,000 luxury cars and 3 million televisions. Another in Zhan Jiang involved the Party chief and 600 other officials. Becker reports from Shaashen, Mao's birthplace, where the failure of a plan to attract tourists forced residents and local police to invest in prostitution instead.

Long regarded apprehensively as our Next Great Enemy, Becker's China is both something very different and much greater than the stereotype suggests. The Chinese is the hidden story of the people of the world's largest nation. Not since Hedrick Smith's The Russians has a nation so poorly understood and so vital to the future been so fascinatingly laid bare.

Synopsis

China's 1.25 billion people comprise nearly a quarter of the world's population. More people live in China than in North America, the European Union, and the former Soviet countries combined. But what do we really know about these millions of people? And what is the future of their frequently misunderstood, increasingly powerful country?

In The Chinese, Jasper Becker, China's premier resident western correspondent, strips the country of its myths and captures the Chinese as they really live. For nearly two decades Becker has lived in China, and reported from areas where western journalists are forbidden. His award-winning Hungry Ghosts, hailed for its brutal honesty in the west, was banned in China.

Here Becker is more candid still, reporting from all over the country: from the tiny, crowded homes of the swollen megalopolises of the southeast rim to a vast, secret network of thousands of defense bunkers in the northwest. He exposes Chinese society in layers from the bottom upward: from remote, illiterate peasants; to the rising classes of businessmen; to local despots; to the twenty grades of Party apparatchiks; to the dominant, comparatively small caste of party leaders who are often ignorant of the people they rule.

Becker lets the Chinese speak for themselves, in voices that are rich and moving. We meet such characters as Nian Guangjiu, an aspiring entrepreneur who sold melon seeds, and was arrested for "corruption," "misuse of public funds," and "hooliganism" over the course of his career, before finally being named in 1998 as one of ninety-six "Heroes of Reform"; and Li Xiaohua, the first man in China to buy a Ferrari, who was arrested for peddling watches before a hair-restoring potion made him a millionaire. He met his wife, the daughter of a senior general, when she took pity on him because he could not afford bus fare.

We also learn a great deal about the magnitude -- and the false face -- of China's vaunted economic boom. In the Guangdong province we meet Mrs. Qin, a member of the Zhuang people, just one of China's fifty-five identified ethnic minorities. Half of the children in her province are malnourished; ninety percent have chronic worm infections.

Institutionalized crime, Becker shows, is one result of this breathtaking poverty, and smuggling in China is big business; a sting in Hainan -- one of China's "special economic zones" -- revealed a single shadow company that had illegally imported 89,000 luxury cars and 3 million televisions. Another in Zhan Jiang involved the Party chief and 600 other officials. Becker reports from Shaashen, Mao's birthplace, where the failure of a plan to attract tourists forced residents and local police to invest in prostitution instead.

Long regarded apprehensively as our Next Great Enemy, Becker's China is both something very different and much greater than the stereotype suggests. The Chinese is the hidden story of the people of the world's largest nation. Not since Hedrick Smith's The Russians has a nation so poorly understood and so vital to the future been so fascinatingly laid bare.

Publishers Weekly

In this ambitious work, Becker, a veteran chronicler of China (Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine), explores the impact that a quarter-century of economic reform has had upon the Chinese people. In a wise attempt to avoid generalizations--all too easy to use when writing of a population of 1.25 billion people--Becker reports on how the various sectors of Chinese society have fared. He is after contrast, not continuity, conundrums rather than convenient answers, and he succeeds admirably. While entrepreneurs in China's coastal cities grow wealthy, he explains, millions of peasants in the hinterland remain mired in the deepest poverty. While privileged Communist Party members parlay their positions into lucrative business deals, countless numbers of laid-off state industrial workers fear for the future. Farming communities battle, usually unsuccessfully, against corrupt local officials who are taxing them into ruin; intellectuals battle with themselves over whether to ally with the regime or defy it. And over it all preside the elite few at the very top of the Party, aloof, out of touch, and determined to remain in power by any means necessary. Becker's stories, and the wealth of data and historical references he also provides, support his contention that, while the market may have made China richer, it has not necessarily made it a fairer or more just society; there may be more losers than winners in China's race toward wealth. (Dec. 8) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

About the Author, Jasper Becker

Jasper Becker was the resident correspondent in China for the Manchester Guardian from 1985 to 1990. He has since reported on Chinese affairs for BBC World Service, as well as for the Economist, and is now Beijing Bureau Chief for the South China Morning Post. His book Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine was the winner of the Dutch PIOOM award for human rights.

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Editorials

From Barnes & Noble

Our Review
How much do you really know about China? Most of us have a few stereotypes built around Mao; excavated clay horsemen; porcelain, pagodas, and pandas; and cheap goods made by teeming masses of people. There are nearly 1.3 billion people living in China -- almost one-quarter of the world's population. There are 55 ethnic minorities who, for the most part, live outside the mainstream of Chinese life and do not speak Chinese. The one-child rule is not consistently enforced, and by mid-century there will be 1.6 billion people living in China. Although officially socialist, China's free markets are developing rapidly. As long-suppressed peasants and corrupt Communist politicians scurry to get rich quick, the less savvy are practically imprisoned by long workdays, crowded firetrap dormitories, and militaristic discipline. The central government turns the other way as the factories of the new entrepreneurs spew and bellow noxious chemical waste into the air and water. Why should you care? Well, if your better humanitarian impulses have not kicked in by now, then think about what that burgeoning population and all that industrial waste portend for the planet you share with the Chinese. You cannot afford to ignore what is happening on the other side of the world.

Jasper Becker, a Western correspondent who has spent much of his professional life among the Chinese, paints a brilliant picture of China's contemporary economy and society in all of its geographic diversity. Becker weaves history into the present, without overburdening the reader with dynastic details. Built on centuries of imperial absolutism, Mao's 1949 communist revolution and its failed policies set the stage for the current regime's middle path of socialist planning and capitalist incentives. The older industrial zones in China's rust belt can no longer compete with the new Special Economic Zones, and much of the labor force sits idle and hopeless in the face of plundered pension funds. Becker predicts that the government will have to absorb the bad debt of the state-owned enterprises, and any remaining assets will be privatized.

Although the future may be in the private sector, the road there is full of potholes. Political leaders come and go, and the new economic movers and shakers cannot predict what tack the Party will next take. Business chiefs do all they can to appease influential Party members. Founder Zhang Hongwei of the Orient Group, the first private company allowed to list shares of stock, offered this truth to the author, "In China doing business is different from doing business in other places: you only spend thirty percent of your effort in business. The other seventy percent is spent on dealing with all kinds of interpersonal relationships."

For most of the Chinese, the bare necessities of life are hard to come by, but for an elite 20 percent, Western consumerism rules. The Party's censorship is breaking down, as the affluent gain access to the Internet, telephones, fax machines, and video players. Today's young adults grew up on foreign children's books, and they watch foreign films at home on pirated videos. Becker believes that this "free flow of information may well undermine China's highly centralized political system."

For the privileged few China is changing rapidly, but these changes are occurring at the expense of the impoverished majority and the natural environment. Oh, the West has its own poverty, population, and pollution problems, you say. Well, yes, but that's all the more reason to be concerned about China.

William T. Wells lives in Winston-Salem, NC.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In this ambitious work, Becker, a veteran chronicler of China (Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine), explores the impact that a quarter-century of economic reform has had upon the Chinese people. In a wise attempt to avoid generalizations--all too easy to use when writing of a population of 1.25 billion people--Becker reports on how the various sectors of Chinese society have fared. He is after contrast, not continuity, conundrums rather than convenient answers, and he succeeds admirably. While entrepreneurs in China's coastal cities grow wealthy, he explains, millions of peasants in the hinterland remain mired in the deepest poverty. While privileged Communist Party members parlay their positions into lucrative business deals, countless numbers of laid-off state industrial workers fear for the future. Farming communities battle, usually unsuccessfully, against corrupt local officials who are taxing them into ruin; intellectuals battle with themselves over whether to ally with the regime or defy it. And over it all preside the elite few at the very top of the Party, aloof, out of touch, and determined to remain in power by any means necessary. Becker's stories, and the wealth of data and historical references he also provides, support his contention that, while the market may have made China richer, it has not necessarily made it a fairer or more just society; there may be more losers than winners in China's race toward wealth. (Dec. 8) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

This is a shrewd journalist's account of a precarious, transmogrifying China in the last years of the 20th century. Becker, whose Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine exposed the tragic follies of the early 1960s, here draws on his reporting for the Hong Kong South China Morning Post to gather anecdotes, vignettes, and striking insights. These do not amount to a balanced or closely reasoned argument, nor do they bear out the insinuation that China today simply continues "traditional" China, but they do weightily convey the sense of a country out of control: political corruption endangers economic development, ecological disaster looms, and a chasm grows between the powerful rich and the underrepresented poor. As Becker shows, China today is emerging from its Maoist past, which created a new nation and a Leninist bureaucracy but not a democracy, and from Deng Xiaoping's reforms, which unleashed market forces without waiting for the development of a legal system, public culture, or institutional transformation. Recommended for large public libraries.--Charles W. Hayford, Northwestern Univ., Evanston, IL Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Lovell

A detailed and perceptive book...Becker's own democratic approach to his subject matter has produced an important book, which throws light on China's subjects and is not afraid to allot blame where appropriate.
β€”Times Literary Supplement

Kirkus Reviews

A remarkably thorough and up-to-date portrait of the Chinese stateβ€”"probably the oldest functioning organization in the world"β€”and the 1.3 billion people inhabiting it. British journalist Becker (Hungry Ghosts, 1997) begins with a brief historical sketch that underscores China's 2,000-year tendency to embrace highly centralized, authoritarian forms of government, thus revealing the cultural roots of Chinese Communism. The author examines the fate the Chinese people, from the poorest of the poor (and the tax collectors and local party leaders who abuse and oppress them) to the emerging class of quasi-entrepreneurs (who benefit from a fundamentally corrupt system of"public" asset management) to the tiny elite of Communist Party officials (who struggle to maintain strict control over their society, even while hoping to prosper from the dynamism of global capitalism). Becker's restrained prose only heightens the absurdity and horror of many of the situations he describesβ€”the recent development of the sex industry in Hainan, for example, or the 1970 earthquake in Yunnan province that killed 15,000 but was kept a secret by the provincial bureaucrats for months."When news reached the [national] authorities . . . the People's Liberation Army was dispatched to the area, and there it distributed not relief supplies but copies of The Thoughts of Chairman Mao." In the epilogue, Becker allows himself some well-earned summary judgments about the nation's prospects, concluding that China's incipient movements toward democracy and capitalism are threatened, not just by its long history of autocratic rule but also by its deep debts,emergingenvironmental crises, and age-old reliance on secrecy, lies, and propaganda at all levels of the bureaucracy. An authoritative, detailed, and nonintimidating treatment of a fascinating and often misunderstood subject. (maps and illustrations, not seen)

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2002
Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Pages
496
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780195149401

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