Some musings on where Asia begins and ends, where is the center and what are the peripheries, and where does Southeast Asia fit in? With some reflections on my recent trip to Kuala Lumpur and Singapore
Read MoreReflections on the Duke Kunshan Cultural Crossroads Festival Held on Campus on August 18, 2018
Recounting the Duke Kunshan Cultural Crossroads Festival of August 2018
Read Moreripped this image from another top 100 sci fi film list...
Dr. Nathan's Top 50 Sci-Fi Films of All Time
Occasionally a friend posts something online that is too good not to include in my blog roll. In this case, it's my former colleague in the UNSW School of History, Dr. Geoff Nathan, who posted a long piece on Facebook today listing his top 50 sci-fi films.
Read MoreThe Radiohead concert in Boston. Simply mind-blowing.
A Musical Holiday in America: Radiohead, Thomas Dolby, and the Musical Missionaries of Shanghai
A review of the Radiohead and Thomas Dolby concert events in the Boston area in August 2018, along with some notes on the progress of my jazz and blues doc.
Read MoreThis flat old earth is all we need
Ode to Thomas Dolby, The Man Who Blinded Us With Science, Not To Mention Technology, Music, and Poetry
Some notes on the man who taught us to love 80s synth music
Read MoreOutside Shinjuku Station, one of the most labyrinthine and crowded stations in the world
A Whirlwind Tour of Tokyo: Ever an A-Maze-ing City!
Notes from a conference trip to Tokyo and catching up with old friends in Nishiogi and Kamakura
Read MoreA mashup I made in high school from cutouts of the Sgt. Peppers album and a peyote-inspired artwork from native America which seemed to work at the time
Ode to the Beatles: Memories, Dreams, and Reflections on the Fab Four
A supreme indulgence: my childhood through the soundtrack of The Beatles
Read MoreA Message to Friends and Colleagues and Like-Minded Folks: Please Support My Work.
A plea to people to support my work—not through donations, but by buying and reading and reviewing my books and articles! (every academic dreams of a wider audience than we normally get)
Read MoreOn the Importance of Play: At Work, at Home, and with Family
Some philosophical musings on homo ludens
Read MoreIt Don’t Get Any More Shanghai Noir Than This: An Online Interview with Paul French, author of City of Devils
A Q&A with writer Paul French about his latest book, City of Devils, a dark and delightful reconstruction of the city’s nocturnal side in its golden years
Read MoreA distorted pano of the building housing the new Shanghai History Museum—perhaps a fitting metaphor for the way Shanghai’s history is treated in the museum by emphasizing certain aspects of its past over others
From Thrills to Chills: A Review of the New Shanghai History Museum in People’s Park
A mixed review of the new history museum, which starts out promising and ends with something left to be desired
Read More
A much younger me, traveling through China in winter 1989. Here I am at a temple in Hangzhou.
Why I Remain in China After All These Years: Some Brief Thoughts and Reflections on the 30th Anniversary of My Engagement with the P.R.C.
Thirty years ago, I opted to stay in Asia and travel extensively in China. Today I look back on thirty years of engagement with China, around half of that living here and building a career and family.
Read MoreAt Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, c. 1982: my sister Robin and I are sporting our favorite band Ts while flying a kite.
My Top Six Bands from My Junior High Days (1981-83)
Last year I wrote a long piece excavating the top 25 bands and albums of my high school years. Now I want to go on an archeological expedition even deeper into the past, back to my junior high days (1981-83) to explore my favorite bands and albums from those formative times. To do so I have to dredge deep into my memories to recall which bands I treasured and put on the highest rotation during those years. Which albums, when listening to them 35 years later, can I still remember every song lyric, every lick, and every record scratch. Which albums, when even thinking about them now, conjure forth a cascade of dim and distant memories of “good times, bad times” with friends and family from my formative years.
Read MoreThe Great World, which once featured Chinese opera, acrobatics and other live performances, does so once again. Today a large crowd gathered to watch the acrobatics.
Walking Historical Shanghai: The Hotel and Theater District around Thibet and Nanjing Roads (Part II)
Part 2 of an exploratory walk around the People's Park/Square area to look at some of the old landmark hotels, amusement halls, and theaters from the 1920s-30s.
Read MoreThe Great World Amusement Center on the corner of Yan'an and Xizang (Tibet) Roads, reopened for business but lacking the fun and pizzazz of the old days
Walking Historical Shanghai: The Hotel and Theater District Around Tibet Road (Part 1)
I’m in process of developing a new walking tour of Shanghai. After many years of covering the French Concession and the Bund, I’m moving onto new territory, namely the area around the People’s Square/Park, formerly the Recreation Ground of the International Settlement.
Read MoreA church on Duolun Road and inside is a bust commemorating the missionary Darroch, whose name was also the original name of this road in Shanghai
三十年代多伦路上的暗杀案 Unraveling a Murder Mystery on Shanghai’s Duolun (Darroch) Road
Yesterday, after taking my daughter Sarah to her supplementary math class in the Hongkou district of Shanghai, we walked over to Duolun Road, a now famous historic street in this part of Shanghai. I was searching for the exact site where a Japanese seaman named Hideo Nakayama had been murdered in 1935, causing an international scandal that likely contributed to Japan’s march to war with China. And I found it.
Read MoreStudy Inca civilization in Lima Peru and visit Machu Picchu—one of many amazing opportunities for study abroad that were being showcased at APAIE
My first APAIE conference
Over the past three days I have been attending the Asia Pacific Association for International Education or APAIE conference: https://www.apaie2018.org/. This year it was held in Singapore and had over 2200 attendees from this region as well as elsewhere around the world. This year it was held in Singapore and had over 2200 attendees from this region as well as elsewhere around the world .
Read MoreCoco Zhao singing with the JZ Big Band
Climbing Into the Way Back Machine: Another Night of Music in Shanghai, Traveling Backwards From 1950s Rock’n’Roll to 1930s Big Band Jazz
A night one the town including a visit to the new Hoy Hoy, a rockabilly joint on Maoming Road, and to the JZ Club to see the Big Band
Read MoreWalking Shanghai: From the Oldest Part of Town to Some Brand New Nightlife Hotspots
Whereupon I go with my students, colleagues and friends upon a long, exhausting, enlightening walking tour of the city, encompassing the wreckage of the old and the glitter of the new
Read MoreThe Beijing Indie Scene is Alive and Kicking (Well, Almost)
A quick trip up to the Jing to check out the indie music scene and help a student kickstart his research project
Read More