I realize Shanghai is a ‘world city’ of the first order (note to self: figure out what it was like in the 70s), but the author(s?) of Shanghaiist seem like awefully bad backpackers. The other -ist websites don’t seem to have the same flavor of writing, but admittedly they do share a tone. Is this because they’re all aimed at 25-year-old white kids and Shanghaiist is a 25-year-old white kid in China?

Anyway, I’ve been following it for a bit and have been following a number of links. Apparently the author is able to access a full variety of information resources even though living behind the Great Firewall. Is the government really not trying all that hard? Or do foreigners get a free pass when it comes to accessing English language news? Or maybe he’s just as clever as these guys. (I suppose there’s a distinct possibility that the internet cops lack English skills.)
I’m a little frightened by just how fast China is adopting a consumer society. This article does little to assuage those fears. Perhaps those 1950s models of urban development can be dusted off to predict what Chinese cities will look like if they continue down these paths?

But at least things are looking good for young college grads. As long as they don’t bring mom and dad to the job interview.

Still have to be careful about what you say though.

1949: Revolution/civil war/founding of the party/state.

1950s: Korean War.  All I’ve got here is a memoir.

60s? Cultural Revolution/large-scale forced migration/massive mortality.
1970s.  Mao softens up.  Earthquake? Nixon.

1978: economic reform.

80s: quiet expansion.  Where’s the news?  I haven’t found much in the scholarly lit.  This is a blank period (for me).

1989: Tienemen student massacre.

1990s: ???  Citations start showing up about expansion.

early 2000s: loud expansion.  US xenophobia?

An overlapping story:

early 1990s: quiet cyber-expansion

late 1990s:  Huge popular cyber-expansion.

I’m now two years behind the literature on what happens next with this story.  Perhaps this most recent project could be considered an attempt to catch up.  It wasn’t until 4 hours after a coffee (italics indicates: serious chat with someone) this week that I was able to articulate that taking up the China question at this point is a somewhat natural next step for the long-term intellectual project.

Not that I’m saying this is particularly intellectual.  It’s been proven too many times to count that I’m not particularly original.  Nor coiuld I be considered exactly heavyweight.

Just sat down and chatted with a retired geographer about this potential project.  Surprisingly, I’m able to articulate three distinct possibilities for a thesis at this point.

The conversation revolved quite a bit around business.  The geographer reminded me of something a job candidate said recently:  “Business is geography.  Geography is business.”  Granted, that’s not who I am, but apparently the cultural stereotype that every Chinese person wants to make a million dollars (like all stereotypes) has its roots in truth.  He relayed the story of being on a bus and watching a guy in a business suit get off, take off his shoes and socks and roll up his pant legs, and walk into a rice paddy to start working his second job.

So perhaps the meta-question becomes:  in this frenzied business atmosphere, how are people adjusting socially and culturally?

As I’ve been casting about looking for topics, search engines’ and other US technology companies’ agreements to block access to material adhere to local Chinese laws has hit the mainstream press. Showing once again how hip librarians are, there’s been talk (and publications) about this for quite a while. Here’s a citation that’s been in my in-box for a while. Now if I could just figure out how to make this question geographic:
The filtering matrix: Integrated mechanisms of information control and the demarcation of borders in cyberspace
by Nart Villeneuve

Journal’s Abstract:

Increasingly, states are adopting practices aimed at regulating and controlling the Internet as it passes through their borders. Seeking to assert information sovereignty over their cyber-territory, governments are implementing Internet content filtering technology at the national level. The implementation of national filtering is most often conducted in secrecy and lacks openness, transparency, and accountability. Policy-makers are seemingly unaware of significant unintended consequences, such as the blocking of content that was never intended to be blocked. Once a national filtering system is in place, governments may be tempted to use it as a tool of political censorship or as a technological “quick fix” to problems that stem from larger social and political issues. As non-transparent filtering practices meld into forms of censorship the effect on democratic practices and the open character of the Internet are discernible. States are increasingly using Internet filtering to control the environment of political speech in fundamental opposition to civil liberties, freedom of speech, and free expression. The consequences of political filtering directly impact democratic practices and can be considered a violation of human rights.

Book chapter: “Socializing the pixel and pixelizing the social in land-use and land-cover-change.” NAS book: People and Pixels: Linking Remote Sensing and Social Science
AndrewM mentioned this as a recent-ish linkage between the social and physical sides of the fence.

(Found the name of the volume on this interesting site.)

This very early in my learning about China, I’m sure that I’ll ask stupid questions.  Here’s a few that I’ve been thinking about just a tiny bit:

  • With all the search engine business in the news, is it possible to study the current state of china’s geospatial data infrastructure?  Are they forthcoming at all with their own gis data?
  • Mao died shortly after an earthquake in 1976.  This huge natural disaster was news to me, but it does explain the tone of many news stories whenever something happens in China and the government is perceived as dragging its feet in acknowledging any problems.  Is there evidence of this feet-dragging in their libraries?  Is the 1976 earthquake something that gets talked about as some sort of watershed moment?  (The progenitor of this question seemed to hint that the chaos killed Mao.)
  • I’m sure this is more of a socio-linguistics question, but can one compare the geographic information seeking behavior of American students going to China to study versus Chinese students
    coming here?  How do the wayfinding behaviors differ?  What geoinformation sources do they seek?
  • Teachforfriendship.org Can this program be analyzed spatially? Would participating be useful at all?

Well, it’s better than hello world, isn’t it?

It only took 4 days to get back to this. Next we’ll start posting literature searches, news from the Mainland, and some speculation about the exact questions I’ll be asking

Additionally there will be notes about information policy and how it varies within China. That is our tentative long-term project.