445 episoder

A weekly discussion of current affairs in China with journalists, writers, academics, policymakers, business people and anyone with something compelling to say about the country that's reshaping the world. Hosted by Kaiser Kuo.

Sinica Podcast Kaiser Kuo

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    • 4,8 • 5 vurderinger

A weekly discussion of current affairs in China with journalists, writers, academics, policymakers, business people and anyone with something compelling to say about the country that's reshaping the world. Hosted by Kaiser Kuo.

    Ed Lanfranco: from Hoarder to Historian

    Ed Lanfranco: from Hoarder to Historian

    This week on the Sinica Podcast, Kaiser is joined by old friend Ed Lanfranco, who lived in Beijing from 1988 to 2009. An inveterate packrat, Ed managed to accumulate an incredible trove of documents, maps, photos, and ephemera from his years there and from the decades and even centuries before his arrival. Ed talks about his collection, and invites scholars interested in his material to get in touch!

    2:46 – Ed’s time in China and saving ephemera 

    11:47 – Ed’s favorite old Chinese brands 

    14:41 – Ed’s map collection 

    19:34 – The Tiananmen incident of 1976, Ed’s collection of unpublished photographs from the Panjiayuan Antique Market, and a leaflet from April 7th, 1976 

    30:40 – Ed’s patriotic music record collection 

    33:28 – Ed’s U.S.-China collection 

    38:00 – The story behind Ed’s U.S.-China panda button from 2002 

    43:18 – Ed’s Tiananmen ’89 story and collection of leaflets and files 

    50:56 – The Underground City of Beijing tour 

    53:50 – Ed’s SARS 2003 epidemic experience and artifacts

    Recommendations:

    Ed: Roger Garside’s Coming Alive: China After Mao; Lin Yutang’s works, especially My Country and My People and The Importance of Living

    Kaiser: The Rochester-based progressive metal trio Haishen’s new album, Awaken the Endless Deep 

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    • 1 t. 6 min.
    Jay Kuo on Beijing's Gay 90s

    Jay Kuo on Beijing's Gay 90s

    This week on Sinica, I'm delighted to welcome — my brother! Jay Kuo is a Broadway writer & producer, and the man behind the terrific U.S. politics-focused Substack newsletter The Status Kuo. In a previous life, from 1996 to 2000, he was also really active in Beijing's gay community, just at the time when homosexuality was being decriminalized and was stepping out of the shadows. We talk about how it all took off. Jay also puts on his other hat to talk about how China figures into American politics with the election less than five months away, and about the legal standing of the TikTok divest-or-ban law.

    4:54 – The gay community in Beijing in the ‘90s, and the Half-and-Half bar in Sanlitun 

    16:06 – How the gay community in Beijing changed after two major rulings 

    27:33 – The end of the “golden era” for the gay community in China

    36:26 – Progress and its drivers and obstacles

    42:28 – Jay’s “China priors”

    50:41 – The issue of China in the upcoming U.S. presidential election 

     57:08 – The TikTok ban bill 

    Recommendations: 

    Jay: The TV series Manhunt (2024), available on Apple TV

    Kaiser: The TV series The Sympathizer (2024), available on HBO; the audiobook of The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen, narrated by François Chau 

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    • 1 t. 9 min.
    The Struggle for Taiwan: Sulmaan Wasif Khan of Tufts University on his new book

    The Struggle for Taiwan: Sulmaan Wasif Khan of Tufts University on his new book

    This week on Sinica, I chat with Sulmaan Wasif Khan, professor of history and international relations at the Fletcher School at Tufts University, about his book The Struggle for Taiwan: A History of America, China, and the Island Caught Between, which comes on May 14.

    4:28 — The Cairo Agreement

    6:59 — General George Marshall, George Kennan, and the change in the idea of American trusteeship of Taiwan?

    17:08 — The debate over the offshore islands of Kinmen and Matsu

    23:55 — Mao’s evolving interest in Taiwan

    27:49 — The averted crisis of 1962

    32:06 — Peng Ming-min and the Taiwan independence movement

    37:14 — What changed in 1971?

    42:51 — The legacy of Chiang Ching-kuo

    45:14 — The story of Lee Teng-hui

    52:37 — The change within the Kuomintang

    1:00:11 — Why Taiwan has become “sacred” for China

    1:10:26 — Sulmaan’s own narrative shift

    1:13:26 — Chen Shui-bian and the threat of independence referendums

    1:17:53 — The Sunflower Movement

    1:25:21 — The causal direction of Taiwan’s importance in the U.S.-China relationship

    1:28:32 — Why the status quo shifted

    1:30:51 — Drawing parallels between Taiwan and Ukraine

    1:33:26 — Sulmaan’s sources for his book

    1:35:38 — Agency versus structure

    1:39:29 — Feedback (so far) on the new book and what’s next for Sulmaan




    Recommendations:

    Sulmaan: Emily Wilson’s translation of The Iliad 

    Kaiser: The “My China Priors” series (and other essays), available on the Sinica Substack; Angus Stewart’s essay, “Alien Bless You: A Review of Netflix’s 3 Body Problem” 




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    • 1 t. 46 min.
    Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jane Perlez on her new podcast series, Face-Off

    Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jane Perlez on her new podcast series, Face-Off

    This week on Sinica, veteran reporter Jane Perlez, who served as bureau chief for the New York Times in Beijing until 2019, joins to discuss her new podcast series Face-Off, which explores different facets of the U.S.-China relationship. We also talk about the state of Western journalism in China in the wake of tit-for-tat expulsions of reporters from the U.S. and China that took place during the Trump administration, and the challenges of covering China well without people on the ground in country.

    5:16 – How Jane Perlez got into podcasting

    7:59 – The challenge of understanding Xi Jinping

    12:44 – The Face-Off podcast and appealing to a general audience

    19:00 – Face-Off’s interview with Zhao Tong on the nuclear issue; the importance of quality diplomacy; and debating the efficacy of the S&ED

    30:48 – The pleasure of meeting Yo-Yo Ma 

    36:52 – The state of Western journalists in China, and how the situation may eventually play out 

    48:44 – The difficulty of covering China from the outside 

    53:52 – What’s next for Jane Perlez and the Face-Off podcast

    Recommendations:

    Jane: Judgment at Tokyo: World War II on Trial and the Making of Modern Asia by Gary Bass

    Kaiser: The Russo-Ukrainian War: The Return of History by Serhii Plokhy 

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    • 1 t. 2 min.
    Political Scientist Iza Ding on Authoritarianism, Legitimacy, and "Resilience"

    Political Scientist Iza Ding on Authoritarianism, Legitimacy, and "Resilience"

    This week on Sinica, Iza Ding, associate professor of political science at Northwestern University and author of The Performative State: Public Scrutiny and Environmental Governance in China, joins to share her ideas on how American academia has framed and problematized authoritarianism, especially when it comes to China. A deep and subtle thinker, she offers thought-provoking critiques of some of the assumptions that have become nearly axiomatic in political science and other social sciences in their approach to understanding politics in China.

    3:13 – Iza Ding’s concept of “authoritarian teleology”

    15:31 – The concept of authoritarian resilience 

    19:58 – The question of regime legitimacy 

    24:09 – The question of whether authoritarianism is an ideology 

    26:24 – The China model? 

    30:58 – Finding a balance between generalizability and the sui generis, and striving toward cognitive empathy and “Verstehen” 

    42:04 – The state of area studies and avoiding essentialism 

    49:32 – Iza Ding’s advice on how to become a better writer 

    Recommendations:

    Iza: The Wife of Bath: A Biography by Marion Turner — the story of Alison, the Wife of Bath in Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales 

    Kaiser: the guitarist Kent Nishimura, especially his recordings of “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” by Tears for Fears, “Sir Duke” by Stevie Wonder, “Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic” by The Police, and “Hey Nineteen” by Steely Dan 




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    • 1 t.
    The View from China: Leading IR scholar Da Wei of Tsinghua's CISS

    The View from China: Leading IR scholar Da Wei of Tsinghua's CISS

    This week on Sinica, I'm delighted to welcome Dá Wēi (达巍), one of China’s foremost scholars of China’s foreign relations and especially relations with the U.S. Da Wei is the director of the Center for International Security and Strategy (CISS) at Tsinghua University in Beijing, and is a professor in the department of International Relations at the School of Social Science at Tsinghua. Before September 2017, Professor Da served as the Director of the Institute of American Studies at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations (CICIR), a leading think tank in Beijing. He was at CICIR for more than two decades and directed the Institute of American Studies from 2013 to 2017.

    We discuss the state of Chinese understanding of the United States: how China’s strategic class assesses the state of the relationship, what brought it to this point, and what the future might hold.




    2:52 – American attitudes toward the U.S.-China relationship

    5:32 – The focus of academic think tanks and strategic communities in the U.S. versus China 

    11:13 – The Chinese strategic community’s understanding of American domestic politics with respect to the upcoming U.S. presidential election  

    15:08 – The Chinese strategic community’s understanding of why and how the current state of relations developed, and why China changed its trajectory  

    23:12 – The Chinese strategic community’s perspectives on American policy: Do they see a difference between the parties?

    27:02 – Da Wei’s concept of “Sullivanism” 

    33:41 – The question of mutual misunderstanding 

    38:37 – The role and influence of China’s think tanks in the policymaking process

    43:29 – The idea of cognitive empathy — aka strageic empathy, or intellectual empathy — and how it could aid mutual understanding and the policymaking process

    52:30 – The Chinese perspective on Russia and the war in Ukraine 

    57:37 – The Chinese perspective on China’s other international relations and the global context of the U.S.-China relationship 

    1:04:19 The issue of Taiwan and the question of the “status quo” 

    1:13:52 The importance of building people-to-people ties 

    1:16:51 – Da Wei's personal anecdote about an experience that influenced his understanding the U.S.-China relationship




    Recommendations:

    Da Wei:  Lust for Life by Irving Stone — a biography of Vincent van Gogh; Pablo Casals’s recording of Johann Sebastian Bach’s Cello Suites; the films Cinema Paradiso (1988) and Forrest Gump (1994).  

    Kaiser: The Sopranos (1999-2007) TV series and The Sopranos Family Cookbook: As Compiled by Artie Bucco, written by Allen Rucker with recipes by Michele Scicolone. 







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    • 1 t. 25 min.

Kundeanmeldelser

4,8 ud af 5
5 vurderinger

5 vurderinger

Frk.papaya ,

AIP (Absolutely Imperative Podcast)

Sorry for the caps in following the app doesn't allow paragraphs•THE SHORT: As the headline says, AIP!! [ I actually DO have created a channel named AIP in my podcast library and this this one of them). •THE LONG: Amazingly informative and eye opening (and sometimes a bit worrying). This should be given attention by all acting in foreign relations, public or private. And more important, incumbent on all public decision makers regarding national and global politics, especially in The West (I certainly wish there was an obligation to our danish politicians to listen to stuff like this (and or the competent people) . •THANKS! Keep it up 👍 from Monica, Denmark. I am an 40yo "average Jane" from DK, Polisci geek passionate about geopolitics and all things related, but Absolutely non-scholar on anything China/Far East and have never been to Asia

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