I’m just back in Britain from a whistle-stop tour of China,
where I was speaking at the Bookworm Literary Festival, a fortnight-long
talkfest organised by the leading independent English-language bookshop in
China. I went with Anna Chen, who was one of the headline
stars of the show – and it was one of the most stimulating foreign trips I’ve
ever made.
The itinerary was hectic. Bookworm has three bookshops-cafes,
in Beijing, Chengdu and Suzhou, and one of its sponsors is the Chinese branch
of Nottingham University in Ningbo: fitting all of them into 10 days of a
two-week trip as we did meant travelling vast distances (Chengdu-Suzhou-Ningbo-Beijing)
by plane and high-speed train and forgetting about sleep. But, boy, was it worth
it. The festival itself was an almost madly diverse series of talks and
readings by an extraordinary selection of authors from China, the Anglophone
world, Europe, the Middle East – poets, novelists, journalists, travel-writers,
writers for kids, biographers, historians – and everything about China was
breathtaking.
It was my first time in the country, I don’t speak the
language, and two weeks in China spent staying in hotels and largely inside the
protective bubble of a speaking tour (with a few days at the end to see
Tiananmen Square, the Forbidden City and the Great Wall) doesn’t make me an
authority on anything. My role model is not the American muckraker Lincoln
Steffens who famously declared “I have seen the future and it works” after a
brief visit to Bolshevik Russia. But one of the great things about the festival
was that we met a large number of people with vast experience of China – Chinese
who have never left the country, Chinese living abroad, western and other expat academics, teachers, students, journalists working in China, many of them from the Chinese diaspora
– who were happy to share their stories and views freely (at least in private).
And although it’s all second-hand, it’s worth relaying some of what they said (although
I’m not for the most part naming names).
OK, it's cliche, but the Great Wall with no one on it at 7.45am is cool |
This is of course a statement of the obvious that can be
found in any western newspaper, but its truth is in your face from the moment you
touch down in China. The first thing I noticed on arriving, in the Sichuan
capital of Chengdu, was – yes – just how new and big everything appeared: the
massive new airport terminal buildings, the new eight-lane motorway to the city
thronged with traffic and criss-crossed by spectacular flyovers, the giant new
apartment blocks stretching as far as the eye can see on the city periphery,
the gargantuan new city-centre skyscrapers, the enormous building sites and
cranes everywhere. The second thing that struck me (apart from the sheer number
of people in the streets – in cars, on motorbikes, on bicycles, on foot – I
learned later that Chengdu has 14 million inhabitants in its urban area, 6
million more than London) was the rampant consumerism on display everywhere:
the shiny new cars that jam every highway, the designer-brand and consumer-electronics
shops in street after street, the mini-skirted girls chatting on their
smartphones. OK, I’d not been expecting party bureaucrats in Mao suits and workers
in blue denim overalls cycling to the cement factory down dirt roads, but this
was stunningly full-on.
This is mundane stuff for anyone who lives in China or knows
it well, and our interlocutors at the Bookworm festival took my amazement in
their stride: many had felt it themselves once and some were still prone to
moments of astonishment, but nearly all also sounded notes of caution. Yes, the
economic and social transformation of China is profound; yes, the state is an
enormously powerful actor, capable of feats of infrastructure development
inconceivable in western liberal democracies – to take just one example, 10,000
miles of high-speed railway built in less than 10 years, the equivalent of constructing
Britain’s planned HS2 line from London to the west Midlands once every couple
of months. But the purpose of all the high-speed railways, motorways and
apartment blocks is a helter-skelter urbanisation and industrialisation of China to get it to a European standard of living in a decade, involving a mass
migration from countryside to city of extraordinary proportions, and it is
fraught with problems. The urban population has been boosted by state diktat and market forces from around a
quarter of the national 1.1 billion 25 years ago to around a half of the 1.4
billion or so today, and the dislocation
is immense. As a teacher in Chengdu put it: it’s the entire population of the
European Union and Russia arriving in town.
David Goodman, a British academic in Suzhou, author of 2014’s
must-read Class in Contemporary China,
says that the migrants from the countryside have become a new urban underclass,
reliant on low-paid menial and casual work: the extraordinary economic growth
of the past 20 years is based on super-exploitation of poor recently-peasant proletarians
in factories and service industries. Anyone who skates over this fundamental
truth is at best a fool, he says – singling out Martin Jacques, the former
editor of Marxism Today magazine in
London, whose book When China Rules the
World has been an improbable global best-seller since 2009.
Me at Bookworm Beijing with Stephen George, editor of That's Beijing |
Anna Chen and me in the Forbidden City |
Well, nothing. But it’s a bit more complicated than it first appears. The Bookworm bookshop-cafes are great places to hang out, eat, drink and buy books – we could do with a few more like them in the UK – and they are qualified free-speech places (in English and Chinese) where there are no obvious limits on what is on sale (in English at least), which are accepted as legitimate businesses by the state. That is a remarkable space to have established.
But there are constraints on what Bookworm can do. The festival is monitored by the authorities – less for what speakers say than for contributions from Chinese members of the audience. I was talking about communism in Britain and British admirers of communist China: the Bookworm organisers said that they’d been unable to find anyone to interpret my remarks into Chinese because their translators were worried about getting the blame for something I might say, and after two of my sessions I was told I’d had officials in the audience. So what: it was rather less intrusive than the norm in eastern Europe 30 years ago, and it all went ahead.
Here we are in Tiananmen Square |
This year, as on eight previous occasions, he and his team managed
to get some of the best people writing about China to talk at the festival, as
well as dozens of writers with no Chinese connection to their work. There were
more than 120 in total, and we were at only a tiny fraction of their events – but
nearly everything we saw was impressive. I was particularly wowed by the
novelist and film-maker Xiaolu Guo (A
Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Lovers, I Am China), the novelist Wena Poon (who launched her latest book, Café Jause: A Story of Viennese Shanghai,
at the festival) and the British non-fiction writer Horatio Clare (A Single Swallow, Down to the Sea in Ships). But there were also fascinating sessions
from the veteran American Beat poet and translator Willis Barnstone, the
British historical novelist Victoria Hislop (with hubby in tow as bag-carrier),
the author-illustrators for children Frané Lessac and Bridget Stevens-Marzo,
the journalist-academic-analysts Michael Meyer (In Manchuria) and Francesco Sisci (A Brave New China)…
The most important thing about Bookworm, however, is that
it’s marginal. It’s a tolerated showcase that could be taken down at any time –
and it’s tolerated because it casts the party-state in a favourable light in
the outside world and does not threaten its existence. The availability of
critical books in English and the accessibility of critical debate in English in
small venues in three cities are – even more than the availability of the Financial Times and the International New York Times, BBC World
and CNN in posh hotels – pin-prick challenges to the regime by comparison with those
posed by the internet, and the party-state has missed few tricks in ensuring
that it controls what its citizens can see on their screens.
The “great firewall of China”, blocking access to much
critical material online from outside China, is not impermeable, but you have
to make an effort to get through it and you are not completely safe if you do.
Although the world wide web as taken for granted in most of the west is
accessible if you have a virtual private network, a dedicated encrypted link
between your computer in China and another elsewhere, VPN users are tracked by
the authorities. More important than the “great firewall”, online postings from
inside China are monitored relentlessly by the state – thousands of bureaucrats
beavering away to snoop – and systematically censored. You can criticise the
local party boss, but never suggest a demonstration.
I don’t have the expertise to read the evidence – some say China
will inevitably loosen up and that Bookworm presages big changes, others that
the party-state is interested only in keeping control, scared by the Chinese
history of unpredicted social explosions and by the implosion of the Soviet
Union more than 20 years ago. But I’m bitten by China, and I’ve got to go back
to see more and talk more. My thanks to Bookworm for giving me a first taste.
The Bookworm festival crew were marvellous. Many thanks for everything to Peter Goff, Catherine Platt, Daniel Clutton, Alan McCluskey, Modjeh Sheikh, Julia Lobyntseva, Tom Price, Anthony Tao and anyone I’ve inadvertently missed out.
The Bookworm festival crew were marvellous. Many thanks for everything to Peter Goff, Catherine Platt, Daniel Clutton, Alan McCluskey, Modjeh Sheikh, Julia Lobyntseva, Tom Price, Anthony Tao and anyone I’ve inadvertently missed out.