China
Strangely out of touch?
Somewhere along the way
I got lost.
Or, the world has gone
one way and I went the other – rather like the road less travelled.
The media is now and
has been for some time deluging us with images and statistics about
China – chiefly as a focus on issues of global warming and the
worsening economic situation. We are told that the Chinese are
building coal-fired power stations faster than we build houses and
the entire western economic prosperity has been built on the back of
cheap good imported from China.
When did the Chinese
stop being coolies?
What I know about China
I learned from books and other media. The Good Earth - Pearl
Buck – describes vividly the life of the Chinese peasant in the
1930's and neatly encapsulates my early understanding of Chinese
culture. They are a bunch of fairly cultured peasants.
Films like 30
Seconds Over Tokyo – 1944 encapsulates the Chinese integration
into the Second World War. Suddenly they became “good guys”-
helping the downed American pilots to evade capture by the dastardly
Japs. Still, the scenes in China are very “Good Earth-ish” -
full of peasants and steeped in the poverty of the people.
Moving on to The
Bridges at Toko Ri (1954) we
find the Chinese had also moved on into bogeyman country. Now they
are the “Yellow Peril” and the faceless Communist ideologues
being battled by the brave men of the US Navy. Still, the emphasis
is on the backwardness of the Chinese and their powerlessness in the
face of superior western technology – in the form of F86's.
Even
In MASH the Chinese
are seen as an afterthought and incidental to the real concerns of
the stories. They are still illiterate peasants governed by Chairman
Mao's Little Red Book.
In
the Vietnam Era China was viewed with hostility and suspicion. It
was assumed that they were supplying and encouraging other slant-eyed
peasants, the Vietnamese, to enable them to attack the US on the
periphery. Importantly, they are still viewed as peasants – if
only by proxy.
Then
I must have missed something. After Tiananman Square when the
Chinese Old Guard jealously defended their right to rule the masses
and the peaceful hand over of Hong Kong, China changed and nobody
told me.
Everywhere
you look China is rather like us. Chinese cities which were
described as cess-pits in The Good Earth are now progressive,
cosmopolitan and modern. The hordes of mindless, moronic, automatons
aimlessly charging the massed machine guns in Korea are now driving
cars on modern roads with Western infrastructure evident in every
photogenic shot. Mao is now a quaint old guy whose Long March is
viewed as a kind of cultural pilgrimage instead of a Communist
ideologue and the architect of human rights abuses that make Sadly
Insane look like a saint.
I
must be getting old.