{"id":7983,"date":"2023-12-19T16:20:28","date_gmt":"2023-12-19T21:20:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.chinacenter.net\/?p=7983"},"modified":"2023-12-19T16:20:28","modified_gmt":"2023-12-19T21:20:28","slug":"china-on-my-mind-a-memoir","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.chinacenter.net\/2023\/china-currents\/22-2\/china-on-my-mind-a-memoir\/","title":{"rendered":"China on My Mind: A Memoir"},"content":{"rendered":"

My book, China on my Mind, <\/i>is both an autobiography and the story of access to China for 50 years. Today we are engaged in a huge debate about U.S.-China relations \u2013 how they should continue in the years ahead. This is, however, about China’s civil war, the Korean war, and our eventual re-encounter with China.\u00a0 What did this mean to someone who lived during this time? America\u2019s cultural encounter with China should not be taken for granted. I write about how an American family was affected by China\u2019s civil war, the Korean War, Nixon\u2019s opening, rapprochement, collaboration, and competition. Missionaries, medicine, and education were all important.<\/p>\n

Childhood diaries, letters, personal memories, and historical documents animate this account. I begin with the late l940s Huaihai battle and my paternal grandfather\u2019s last time in China. As he wrote, \u201cIt was a night to be remembered, for it was old Suchow\u2019s last night of freedom.\u201d Suchow, today Xuzhou, becomes a metaphor for old and new China. Although I grew up \u2013 in Japan and Korea \u2013 with tales of Xuzhou I never dreamed that I would eventually go there or reprise my grandmother\u2019s educational work when, in 2012, I became vice-chancellor of Duke Kunshan University in the same Chinese province.<\/p>\n

The role of education and the changing roles of Chinese and American intellectuals are at the heart of this narrative. In the mid-1970s, Chinese were just reemerging from isolation and were eager to learn from Western colleagues. I remember my first Chinese natural scientist, Ku Kung-shu of the Institute of Geophysics, answering a Mayflower Hotel waitress\u2019s dessert query on his first night back in the United States, \u201cApple pie, apple pie \u00e0 la mode. I have waited decades for a piece of American apple pie.\u201d Ku then proceeded to spend a month showing his younger colleagues American advances in earthquake prediction.<\/p>\n

Chinese scholars were so excited to be in America. Every aspect \u2013 from growing corn to extracting oil to manufacturing high technology \u2014 was to be studied for how China could adopt the American way. I was, nonetheless, surprised when Chinese students \u2013 at first by the thousands and even today by the hundreds of thousands \u2013 sought out freedom, sought out American universities. They also saw the downsides of our society even as many elected to become part of our community.<\/p>\n

Americans were also eager to learn what Chinese archives, society, and polity would show about the world\u2019s largest developing country. American sinologists \u2013 John Fairbank, Doak Barnett, Frederic Wakeman, Michael Oksenberg, and Ezra Vogel, naming just a few who have now passed on \u2013 were all involved in the first decades of re-establishing ties with China. From them, I learned how much we did not know and how to make sure future generations \u2013 their students \u2013 were never again in the dark.<\/p>\n

I write about the extended trajectory of America\u2019s diplomatic, economic, and strategic role in China. Through it all, cultural relations were seen as drawing the two societies together. But political obstacles still intruded, nothing more destabilizing than that of Taiwan\u2019s status. Early on, in 1974, the Chinese seismology delegation walked out of a Denny\u2019s restaurant in protest of a Taiwanese flag on the menu masthead. Taiwan was always brought up in Chinese briefings and I have never known a Chinese citizen who has not agreed with the government\u2019s dictum that Taiwan is a part of China. I realize the power of the Taiwan issue to China and the conundrum it presents to American policy makers. This is but one area in which the values of the two societies functioned differently. As this account makes clear, the difficulties between the two societies were present from the very beginning.<\/p>\n

The changing role of Chinese intellectuals, about which I write a lot, is an interest which dates back to graduate school papers on the May 4th revolution. I had no idea then that the quintessential wealthy Rockefeller family would become so important to my understanding of education, Chinese intellectuals, and philanthropy. From early in the 20th<\/sup> century, Rockefeller and the Rockefeller Foundation believed that Chinese scientists were to be citizens of the world, and they never forgot. In this case, following American medicine in China was to follow Chinese education and intellectuals through the thick and thin times of this era. Chinese intellectuals who wrestled with the complexities of American influence became my guides to China itself. I began by studying their articles in the l970s and continued with personal interviews in the l980s and ever since. The journey that I traveled with them, across many regions of China, led to the surprising discovery that the American influence was enduring. This is an essential part of my world outlook today.<\/p>\n

As a university leader \u2013 at Agnes Scott College, Emory University, and Duke Kunshan University \u2013 I had the opportunity to see how China\u2019s education system is always changing. For example, faculty autonomy and academic freedom are discussed but are understood quite differently than in the United States. At Duke Kunshan I did discover how difficult it was to join the missions of three very different sponsors \u2013 an American university, a Chinese city, and a Chinese university. One example will suffice \u2013 from the world of branding no less. How do you create a new identity for a joint-venture American and Chinese university? My young Chinese staff finally came up with a color-coded solution: Duke was bright blue, Kunshan was light green, and Wuhan was dark green. But even the colors never merged.<\/p>\n

Throughout the decades since Nixon \u201copened\u201d China, American organizations \u2013 from the Ford Foundation to Yale-China to the China Medical Board and many others \u2013 wanted to return to China. I say \u201creturn\u201d because so many had a previous mission in China. I was on the boards of these organizations and write about how much they struggled to reenter China and then to stay involved. But today both countries have changed and perhaps seek to go their own way. U.S.-China relations will persist but look different in the future.<\/p>\n

I am grateful that the China Research Center has included my book in its series on China-related memoirs and that Hanchao Lu, its director, has contributed a preface.<\/p>\n

This book is available both from the publisher, Xlibris, or Amazon<\/a>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

My book, China on my Mind, is both an autobiography and the story of access to China for 50 years. 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