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Ep. 348 | Paper Sons and the Chinese Confessions Program

The China History Podcast

Release Date: 09/01/2024

Ep. 362 | The Lin Biao Incident (Part 1) show art Ep. 362 | The Lin Biao Incident (Part 1)

The China History Podcast

This is Part 1 of a 2-Part series looking at the life of Lin Biao and the actual Lin Biao Incident itself. This bit of history is documented to death. I downloaded a dozen scholarly papers, read a few books, went through my entire library, and gathered as much information as possible. But practically every source ends with "cannot be proved." The Lin Biao Incident is China's version of the Kennedy assassination. So much we know. So much we have no idea. In this Part 1 episode, I cover Lin Biao's early life and how he rose up on Mao's coattails, going back to the Jiangxi Soviet era. I'll take...

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Ep. 361 | McKinley, Tariffs, and the Open Door Policy show art Ep. 361 | McKinley, Tariffs, and the Open Door Policy

The China History Podcast

Just in time for Liberation Day, I'm presenting this timely episode. Back in 1890, with the aim of protecting American companies from foreign competition, tariffs were jacked up significantly.  With all the advances in transport, logistics, and new technologies, world trade was shifting into a higher gear. For a few centuries, the Ming and Qing emperors did their damnedest to regulate the invasion of European traders clamoring to do business with Chinese merchants. The foreigners wanted free, open, and unfettered trade with China. By the 1890’s and a few humiliating unequal treaties...

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Ep. 360 | Plant Hunters during the Qing Dynasty (Part 2) show art Ep. 360 | Plant Hunters during the Qing Dynasty (Part 2)

The China History Podcast

This is the second of a two-part mini-series introducing the world of European plant hunting in China. In this episode, we look at some of the more noteworthy names and their accomplishments. After the exploits of Robert Fortune, many other plant hunters followed in his footsteps to China. We'll look at Henry Fletcher Hance, Père David, Augustine Henry, Ernest Wilson, and George Forrest, among others. Thanks to all for for listening.

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Ep. 359 | Plant Hunters during the Qing Dynasty (Part 1) show art Ep. 359 | Plant Hunters during the Qing Dynasty (Part 1)

The China History Podcast

I was afraid I'd barely be able to scrape together enough material for a short episode. Instead, this one is gonna take almost two hours to tell. I hope no one minds that I opted not to drown anyone with Latin names and to go easy on the scientific aspects behind plants. The focus will be on the European and later, American plant hunters who came to China between the 16th and 20th centuries. This episode will look at some of the exploits of the early Jesuit missionaries up through Robert Fortune's four trip

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Introducing: History Daily show art Introducing: History Daily

The China History Podcast

Calling all fans of podcast great, Lindsay Graham! Here's a sampling of the very popular podcast, History Daily.

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Laszlo and Andrew Shaw discuss the History of Jade show art Laszlo and Andrew Shaw discuss the History of Jade

The China History Podcast

Former BBC reporter and master jade carver Andrew Shaw is back. What an informative interview this one turned out to be! I hope you all enjoy this discussion of the history and legends behind jade. I learned quite a bit during this brief talk. I hope you do too.

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Looted China Treasures, Laszlo chats with Andrew Shaw and his book, Looted China Treasures, Laszlo chats with Andrew Shaw and his book, "Spoil"

The China History Podcast

I welcomed Wuhan-based Andrew Shaw onto the CHP to talk about his book. It's all about the plundering of China's cultural treasures and imperial artifacts by not just the British, French, and Americans. It seems everyone got in on the act. Even the local people. It's a miracle there was anything left for Chian's museums. Many of you are familiar with the stories about looting that took place in China between the 1840s and the turn of the century. In Andrew Shaw's book, "Spoil" we'll look at the extent of wh

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"The Second Journey" An interview with Joel Bigman

The China History Podcast

With the Singapore History series out of the way, and 2025 off and running, here's the first special interview episode of the year. Not too long ago, I had the pleasure of interviewing Mr. Joel Bigman, author of a new book called "The Second Journey." If you're familiar with the Ming Dynasty novel "Journey to the West," this one by Joel might sound familiar. You might never look at "Journey to the West" the same way again. This was quite an interesting and unique story that combined two ancient cultures. It

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Ep. 358 | The History of Singapore (Part 10) show art Ep. 358 | The History of Singapore (Part 10)

The China History Podcast

First of all, to all of you who lasted through the entire series up to this concluding episode, I extend to you, my deepest appreciation. I hope you learned a few things about Singapore.

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Ep. 357 | The History of Singapore (Part 9) show art Ep. 357 | The History of Singapore (Part 9)

The China History Podcast

In its hour of need, quite a few leaders rose to the occasion in Singapore. Lee Kuan Yew didn't transform the nation by himself. Last time we saw how S. Rajaratnam carried the flag around the world and advanced Singapore diplomatically. In this episode, I'll also introduce Dutch economist Dr. Albert Winsemius and his good advice. Winsemius suggested a number of priorities for Singapore to gain some economic traction. The man who had to make these ideas happen in real life was Dr. Goh Keng Swee. We'll look a

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More Episodes

This is surprisingly not very well-known and certainly wasn't taught in my US history classes. Here's a story for you that many might find hard to believe. Perhaps you're already familiar with the history of America's Chinese Paper Sons. Less known is the story of the 1957 Chinese Confessions Program. In this episode, we'll look back on the early to mid-20th century. First I'll present a general overview of San Francisco's Paper Sons and some of the history and culture that surrounded it. Then we can take another romp through Red Scare America in the 1950s and the 1957 Chinese Confessions Program. This one, I'm sure most of you never read about.

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