Sunday, August 03, 2008

Shanghai Journal

July 1, 2008
My father and I land in Pudong International Airport. It is one of two Shanghai international airports and its interior is reminiscent of Toronto’s Pearson. High ceilings and extensive metallic lines parallel the crisp, official-accented voice through the speakerphones.

We board the magnetic levitation train. It was built by a German firm looking to showcase its technology. It is impressive, world-class, and a world first. But the ridership is only at 20 percent capacity, and as we reach the top speed of 435 km/h, the car is not so steady. It does not bother me so much, but I do begin to draw my first links in this city. In the grand halls of the airport we passed through customs without a flinch; the man at the machine was alone and he barely cared to inspect. At the maglev luggage scan I was stopped. They told me to sip my liquid in front of them. The link is not so clear, but something is up. We float to a stop. We must descend somewhere in the suburbs of Shanghai.

The taxi is mid-afternoon-hot despite the air conditioning. The cabby takes us from Longyang Road station in Pudong to our hotel in the central city. The ride is long because of the traffic; we drive west, over the Huangpu river and connect to a highway that cuts callously through the city heart. My father has often critiqued the slowness of democratic urban construction in Montreal and in Hong Kong; it is evident that here such democracy is not an issue. On both sides of this wide, elevated freeway are high-rises that do not differ architecturally or functionally. The commercial towers are just as alluring in their design and just as dispersed in their siting. This last point is of additional interest. It was to be quite difficult to conceptualize Shanghai in only several days as a similarly undulating landscape would characterize long stretches of the central city.


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The hotel is called New World Mayfair Hotel, though in Chinese it transliterates as Paris Spring Hotel. Perhaps it did not wish to be judged by Western visitors for not living up to its stated identity. Whatever the case, this five-star hotel has covered itself with Western idioms and images. A reproduction of Van Gogh’s Terrase de Café la Nuit framed into the big glass revolving entrance greets the visitor. The second-floor restaurant is called Chez Lili. But the French metaphors end there as the latter serves a medley Chinese cuisine including the very popular Cantonese dim sum. Reproductions of European canonical paintings irrespective of country are fitted in every room and the bar vivifies with live American and British soft rock at night – performed by an alluring Chinese songbird.

The sun is still in mid-sky so, after dropping our bags, we make our way to the purpose of this trip: a printing and design trade show involving my father’s business. We board the air conditioned subway train and make our way across the city, back east to Longyang Road station. In the metro car, a young girl near me is intense in cell phone conversation. I find it curious that she speaks the Shanghai dialect – how does this linguistic island survive in a sea of Mandarin (and English) schooling, media, and business communication? My father tells me that it will pass away, that only the older generations stick to it. But listening to the adolescent enunciate, I do not think so – not for a while at least. Though it would be later that I would be able to articulate why.

The Shanghai New International Exhibition Center is located in Pudong, one of several districts fringing the central city that have seen rapid development in the reform era partly as a result of absorbing inner city relocation[2]. Since urban form in prereform China bore no heed to land value, the gap between existing and potential rent in the market transition has resulted in extensive property redevelopment and gentrification in the inner city[3]. The inner and outer suburbs have thus increased in residential developments, factories, and work units. But Pudong specifically has also been the site of high-profile commercial, financial, and technological investment, owing in part to it being a New Open Economic Development Zone since 1990. Pudong’s geography is also salient as it stretches between the Huangpu river and the East China Sea. In addition to port access, being across the Huangpu means that it flanks the riverside city heart in the same way that a boomed Kowloon has flanked the skyscraping bank of Hong Kong Island.

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When I speak of the central city or the inner city I am referring to Puxi, the traditional Shanghai west of the Huangpu. A vernacular region, Puxi remains Shanghai’s political, commercial, and cultural center despite Pudong’s recent ascendancy. It is also referred to as the city core in scholarly works that deal with the dynamics of Shanghai’s sociospatial restructuring in the market transition[4]. Below is a map that illustrates the entire metropolitan area of Shanghai including Puxi’s nine adminsitrative districts. For interest sake, I have also included a table of various Shanghai statistics in comparison with Beijing. One notes, for instance, the intense population density of Puxi.


Shanghai
Beijing
Area (km²)
6 340
16 800
Central city
289
1 370
Suburb
6 051
15 430
Population
16 400 000
13 600 000
Central city
6 900 000
8 500 000
Suburb
9 500 000
5 100 000
Density (ppl per km²)
2 588
807
Central city
23 944
6 200
Suburb
1 566
330
Per capita income (yuan)


Urban
16 683
15 640
Rural
7 066
6 170
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By the time we emerge from setting up the trade exhibit, the sun has set. My father, Rita – a Hong Kong communications associate – and I take a taxi back to the hotel where all three of us are staying. One of the Shanghainese employees had beckoned this taxi whose engine purred smooth like the air conditioning. We spot a red ferrari and the driver comments that these are common sightings now in Shanghai. The two Hongkongers disagree and suggest that perhaps the red car is counterfeit. No no no, the driver insists. Rita tells me that Shanghai is exciting but it is very much a spectacle. The buildings gleam with neon patterns and swirl like spaceships, but inside things do not live up to standard. The materials may be faulty; the facilities may lack bathroom paper; the staff may disregard your requests; you may be mistakenly charged to a wrong account. I wondered about that. Were these select Hong Kong frustrations, or was this Shanghai?


July 2, 2008

As in Tokyo, my premier day-time mission is the search for a library. It is for the reasons I have written about previously, but it is also a simple, arbitrary destination. I know not who or what I shall encounter.

The place that I decide to visit – Shanghai Jiaotong University – is nearby in Xuhui district, which touches the southeast border of Changning district where the hotel is located. I step into the subway station for lunch. I pass through a dense network of little shops mainly selling women’s clothing, shoes, and accessories. There is then a dense network of busy underground eateries. A roomy McDonald’s catches my curiosity. Dozens of bright and healthy-looking young workers maneuver behind the counter; the eating area is accordingly full. Walking further in, I pick a large oval table and take a seat beside my new friends. This collective sitting reminds me of the library in Tokyo. It was impossible to find a table to work until I stumbled upon the study room. There we all worked, side by side.

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There is no rail stop at Jiaotong University. Walking out of the nearest station, I ask a young lady for directions. Like so many other women in the city she holds a sunbrella, despite the day’s cloudiness. To be fair-skinned is to be urban, civilized, and – according to my mother – it is just plain prettier.
I must have missed the scale of my map because I am walking many blocks that are invisible on paper. I turn onto a smaller street – a gentleman explicates clearly that I only need to follow this road to its end. I notice the many commoners, bikes, and motorcycles and think of a quaint university service pocket similar to the cheap eateries around Concordia University in Montreal. The road curves often, and the buildings are low, old, and often placed at interesting angles to the road. A cultural intimacy is felt through the street life. I glimpse openings and alleys with low-tabled eateries and poorly-lit spaces shops I think or fixing spaces or perhaps just places to gather. I make out a “Chongqing Hot-and-Numb Soup” shop, a hardware shop, a window-fitting shop, and a tailor shop.

This place, in fact, is not so different from the area around New World Mayfair Hotel. True, the roads are more grid-like and the buildings line up to face the street in that Changning area. And true, the buildings are slightly higher and the sidewalks are wide, but there is still a distinctive, intimate local street life. The dress code is very lax, especially for the way men wear (or do not wear) shirts, make-shift barbecue and hot-pot stands flank street merchants with a blanket full of wares, and late soup sippers in humble restaurants deck the sidewalk sides. This is what I love about central Shanghai – you may not find these props at certain sanitized tourist havens but if you turn a corner and walk a couple blocks, the informal economy will be there to welcome you again.
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Both Changning and Xuhui are older districts. In Shanghai’s old city, you find street and housing patterns of diverse urbanist lineages, from the wide avenues and geometric corners of the 19th century International Settlement – re-asserted in utilitarian and formalistic Soviet “superblocks” – to autonomous “neighbourhood units” and “microdistricts” of Anglo-American community planning descent laid out in flexible accomodation to site topographies[7]. Within the areas I described, the buildings specifically reflect a Maoist austerity prioritizing production and capital accumulation. In the dual nationalist narrative of postcolonial, socialist victory over formerly imperialist, advanced capitalist societies, it was imperative that present consumption be sacrificed for future, modern glory[8]. Now, however, these dilapidating matchbox walk-ups are a shame to be demolished. In the early-to-mid nineties urban renewal in Shanghai involved mostly small-scale housing renovation projects. Then in the late nineties city policies reflected an impatience for larger-scale redevelopment[9]. Due to a cool real estate market and the subordination of property firms by city governance, such redevelopment at first benefitted former residents. For instance, New Fukangli in Jiang’an district was financed in large part by local residents, who were in turn extensively consulted as to the form of their new home[10]. But by the new millenium, the city was in need of additional capital in order for the reconstruction to continue apace; property firms were thus privatized and a concurrent market rebound incited a trend of luxury commodity developments in the inner city.
In the bid to modernize, old Shanghai is not only being torn down but forgotten as well, along with the displaced residents who can no longer afford to live in the new complexes. The old lilong – low-rise lane houses typical of pre-revolutionary Shanghai – are razed and replaced by scientific, gated showcases. Though this may have concerned civic-minded planners, it has unmistakably supported Shanghai’s aspiration to be a cosmopolitan, world city. A young and educated generation of street officers in inner city areas compete, in coordination with real estate developers and like-minded municipal planners, to demonstrate ”model communities”. Like the infamous urban renewal of postwar America, marginal spaces – in this case often neighbourhoods impoverished by state enterprise restructuring – are simply rebuilt. But unlike the 50s and 60s of American suburbanization, the rich move in and perpetuate a sociospatial stratification reinforced by poorly serviced, distant suburbs[11]. Finally, in the process of forgetting, a new history is propagated. Shanghai’s cosmopolitan, colonial era is evoked as the city’s authentic identity[12]. Maoist history – a history that had given inner city dwellers work and security and honour – is for many an inconvenient blip in the city’s internationalist becoming.
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The 1935 campus I finally reach, a fine-lined garden, though perhaps soon to be shadowed by high-rises. For now, tall buildings stand side by side smaller ones, and a bank will be neighbour to an improvised eatery. A skinny man sleeps on the sidewalk under a tree; his wife tends the cart they pull. A bike heaves by: are the piled sacks the person’s entire possessions? You see elderly women in standard dress methodically clean the refuse bins. For now, even as they pick up after a society that worships the young the handsome and the educated, they may still call this place their own.
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Tonight is company party night. After work, the employees taxi to meet us at a finer restaurant. Our taxi – containing my father, Rita, and I – is a little lost. My father notes that this is not uncommon: Shanghai taxi drivers do not know where restaurants are. I am told that in Hong Kong they will even comment on the venue and menu. But watching the taxi meter here tick at an impossibly economical rate, the dissimilarity is unsurprising.
We gather round the white circular table. Apart from us three, there is Howard, the Shanghai office manager for my father’s firm, and seven office workers. The seating is unintentionally compartmentalized, with the female employees in one group, the males in a second group, and the directors in a third. One exception is Wei, who sits between Howard and I.
Wei is Shanghainese, though she lies and says that she is from Anhui province – an impoverished region from which many migrants come, staffing Shanghai’s spaces of consumption. My father laughs. I met her yesterday – I asked if she lived with her colleagues, in a work unit dormitory. Yes, she replies. I laugh.
She comments on the dour attitude of our waitresses. She explains that it is because they are migrants and – Howard jumps in: “To put it simply, this dish here, it will take them a night of work to afford.” I understand this, but then I do not agree with customers complaining about the service. Wei tries to help me to understand: “It is like there is something wrong with their psychology.” I cannot disagree with that: one sign of pathology is the denial of reality. I push the absurdity further and compare them to black people who do not appreciate their situation. “Exactly! That is a perfect analogy,” says Howard.
Wei tells me that it is no longer acceptable to see a black man on the street and call out, “Hey, Black!”

We go for a walk. She was born the year of the rat, so we are juxtaposed in age. I tell her I am not sure why we in North America do not usually sing karaoke. She tells me it is because people in America like to play their own guitars and sing. I find out that sometimes marriages are facilitated by elders – there simply are not the same opportunities to meet new people in a casual setting. Yes, she is a native Shanghainese and works in an office, but still she must live at an hour’s commute. I do not know her history, why her mother and father must live there. I do not know why she dresses so plainly, unlike the other employees. And I wonder at when she told us not to waste the nation’s food. The Shanghainese may have appropriated a new teleology now, but the former historicism remains in movements, utterances, thoughts. After all, it was the Maoist control of urban migration that elevated Shanghai privilege. Though their parents were almost all immigrants, the new generation in Communist Shanghai would identify themselves with this prized place[14]. Their dialect was perfect.


July 3, 2008
After a morning of writing, I clue back into the actual hotel that is my environment. When the air conditioner is on and the towels are clean, one can leave the physical plane. But the world of imagination soon ends; I am back on a steaming street in Shanghai, and I cannot see the sky.
I arrive at the International Arena of the new exhibition center. The floor space here is four times as expensive as the other sections. My dad informs me of last night’s robbery. It only adds to all the negative experiences he has had doing business on the mainland. The officials do not let him see the security footage because they fear that it might be their own personnel; in such a case all would have to be fired. This is what they tell him.
The staff is exhausted from last night’s extended shift that finale-ed at the karaoke club. They live the furthest away and they were not singing as much as their bosses, but it was still important as it was a rare social occasion. Howard sings his heart to the familiar Cantonese refrains; because of my father he rarely sees his wife and two teenage children in Hong Kong. My father shouts out too but is laughing; he is used to living away from us and telephoning in the business hours of others.
--
It is time to go. The convention center tells us this by turning off the air conditioning a half-hour beforehand. At the exit are two very long lines of people awaiting taxis and coaches (the metro is at an inconvenient distance). The sun is still pounding through the smog. We get onto an unlicenced van. I am connecting the dots. I begin to understand what Rita was getting at in the car that first night.
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We take the metro in the opposite direction so as to get a seat (the exhibition station is only one stop away from the end of the line). On the Shanghai metro, there is a clear prioritizing of sitting. You see people bunch up close to the screen doors in preparation for a sprint in.
I stand beside Alyssa – as the accounts person she must return to the office after each exhibition day. She is sitting. She tells me that she does not like to stand because some men will press their bodies up close. She speaks quickly but precisely; it is a person listening and responding to a time full of permutation and opportunity. China is on its way, she tells me – though it is not there yet it still needs time. Then she asks herself why she tells me this, as if speaking to a foreigner. Her children – after she marries – will study abroad like me, even though children nowadays begin to learn English by primary school. But first she will move out with a friend: presently she is staying with her uncle as a temporary arrangement. Her dress is trendy and dialoguing with me she recollects and re-asserts the path of her thoughts; it is a personal, fleeting ground.
Her negotiation of the post-reform world has taken her to Shanghai from her home city in Hubei province. Though Wuhan is a capital city and the most populous in central China, she is nonetheless a migrant, with all the formal and informal meanings attached to such a status. Beijing is too harsh for migrants, she tells me. I have indeed heard from others of a Beijing attitude, a pretension towards outsiders worse than in Shanghai. I ask Alyssa how it is better in Shanghai. She admits that it is probably not much better, but at least at the (Hong Kong based) office it is not an issue. Still, it is not certain that she will stay here.
The group of us squeeze up a tiny elevator to the office.


July 4, 2008
Groggy-eyed, I pull on the closet door. The handle breaks off.
At breakfast, a busgirl drops a knife. She is lectured on how to do things right. She learns that she must not rush, that there is time.
I recall the evening before. A waitress leaves a bit of beer in the bottle. This is a faux-pas, according to the two businessmen with whom I am dining. I suggest that she was probably not brought up dining in nice places. Perhaps to her, it all seems like an arbitrary set of gestures.
The waitresses stand at their spots and watch – as they have been instructed to do.
Returning to my room, a young woman is scrubbing the wall. She bids me well. She is my age. Why is it me walking to the hotel room and her scrubbing the wall and smiling politely?
A taxi driver takes me to the Huangpu last night. It is past midnight; he is in the second half of his twenty-four hour shift. I say I wish to think near the river; I wonder what he must think of me.
The promenade by the river is beautiful, cool enough to sleep; a relaxed wind. Vendors sit and chat, the lights of Pudong dance across from us. This is the famous Bund waterfront, part of the old International Settlement. During the day, one hears the sounds of construction. Highways are being diverted and the grand banks and trading houses are being restored. A city must have history and Shanghai’s history, it seems, is here.
This city is a spectacle, and yet it is not a spectacle. Some may try to make a show, but others just don't care.
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My mother, brother, grandmother, and a family friend have arrived from Hong Kong. This morning, we all bundle over to an old friend of my father’s. The residence is about a half-hour away by subway.
We walk on a commercial street, but it is clear that this is a residential district. We turn right, into what must be a socialist housing complex. Two long and colourless apartment blocks face one another; the mediating way is a broad pedestrian lane. This neighbourhood was not meant for private automobiles, and it is likely that for most inhabitants this fact of life has not changed.
Turning left we enter. Three generations live here with their spouses and children, sharing the bathroom and the kitchen. My mother recalls growing up in Beijing: it was more crowded – there was sharing with other families – but the buildings were new then. The walls here are covered with numbers and short phrases stamped in black and red: permanent advertisements. Beneath, the walls are a white mortar scraped on a concrete frame. The touch of steel pipes and lilting ceramic at my feet – here is little division between outside and inside, between the public and the private. Here I cannot escape from the physical plane; the discomfort is real but somehow I am more alive.
We are led to the living room. A compact fluorescent lightbulb sweeps away the darkness. Things have changed. The folding futon has enabled this interior social space during the daytime. Guests are treated to an air-conditioning unit, as well as to the sight of a shiny black upright piano. Above the piano is a photo- and certificate-taped wall dedicated to the center of this household: the still shy boy of thirteen. It is not long before we are treated to his piano practice. I turn the TV off so that we can pay proper heed.
Although the hosts have been generous in their watermelon and plastic-wrapped ice cream offering we are subsequently led to a nearby restaurant. But before I go, I visit the grandmother, the reason for my father’s repeated return after so many years. Having suffered a stroke, she lies in bed. For some reason, she does not wish to let go of my hand.
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I do not know why it is so easy to drop roots here. It may be the language – even though Mandarin is in a sense an artificial language it is more particular to me than English. It may also be that there are roots here. Shanghai may be a relatively young city – a city wall was built around the seaport only in the 16th century – and its dialect a young dialect – Shanghainese has been considered China’s youngest dialect as well as an amalgam of surrounding dialects[18], but that there is a local linguistic culture, for me, gives the city place. It is not exchangeable or, like the savourous multicultural havens of North America, best defined in relation to other places and histories. I have written about feeling at home in Ryogoku, but I think China affects me at a personal level as well. Like the Chinese-American writer Fred Wah expresses, I do not know what it means to “feel Chinese”, but I do know how it feels to speak Mandarin, to speak Cantonese, to be taken as Chinese, to eat rice with vegetables every day, or to wake up frosty-eyed and hear Chinese voices soft in the kitchen. I remember leaving Tokyo and the enthusiasm I had the first night in Hong Kong – the enthusiam with which I ordered foods that were hot-colored, hot-tasting; my body must have been chilled by wet and salty noodles and raw fish and seaweed.
As I relate to this place, I am constantly exchanging my life with those of others. It is still strange to see Wei at work, knowing that this is a very large part of her life. After work, she commutes home. She tells me about the importance of working, of improving ourselves. I know that my life will be very different from hers, that I will have more time for other pursuits, and that even my work will be a privilege – in addition to being renumerative and a fulfillment of my family and societal responsibilities. It is strange to see her because I question if it is fair to value what I value, to seek what I seek. Is it fair to have First World dreams if others cannot share them? In Wei’s case, it may have been her choice, but even the choice to not study at university must be taken in the context of her familial and financial environment. But who is to say that all young and especially intelligent people should pursue higher education? Well, Chinese parents especially, actually.
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I think it is becoming evident to us why China studies have become so popular in recent years. There is simply no theoretical paradigm with which to capture its bustling diversity in form, in ideology – and this is reflected through the valuing of money, family, nation, and self all at once, one at a time, and even in contradiction. Confucian and nationalist, socialist ethical idioms are heard alongside the celebration of individual, transnational consumerism. Yet of course, this is nothing new. In the first centuries of the common era, Buddhism slowly became accepted in China – but in the guise of Taoism, forming a hybridity that persists to this day. In the nineteenth century, as European powers were carving up China’s territory and bleeding it of its national treasures, Confucian scholar-officials debated modernization strategies under the philosophy of “Western technique, Chinese foundation”. More familiar to us, a Maoism based explicitly “on contradiction” has evolved into a “socialist market economy”. On the streets, in the parks, Tai Chi practitioners circulate to the rhythm of boombox rollerbladers; a woman writes in virtual space of her sexcapades; a good-looking young man waits to gather enough of an income before beginning to date. A sick person consults a doctor trained in both Western and Chinese philosophies of the body; then again, perhaps a few mirrors in the window will do the trick. What is Chinese is whatever works! And all this one finds right here in Shanghai, where a young woman picks me off the street to converse in English – she orders but does not eat and pressures me to pay; she then pays herself and stomps off.

July 5, 2008
Today I decide to visit the finer side of life, the space in Shanghai that is already what it envisions itself to become. I take the subway east to People’s Square, deeper into the heart of Puxi. Here the roads are smooth, wide pedestrian sidewalks are neatly laid with stone and lined with trees, and one takes in the view of majestic, free-thinking architecture. It is a landscape meant to do away with the escape from the physical, for one’s imagination becomes conveniently real.
A concentration of governmental and cultural edifices, including Shanghai City Hall, Shanghai Urban Planning Exhibition Hall, Shanghai Grand Theatre, and Shanghai Art Museum, monumentalize this central location. As its name suggests, this is also the space to hold city-wide festival activities. To top it off, one will also find a fine array of shops, hotels, and café experiences within a moment’s walk, or simply at the underground level.
I look for MOCA Shanghai: the city’s museum of contemporary art. A wide river of people are exiting the Grand Theatre’s afternoon performance; a mother with a child points me in the right direction. The museum is in People’s Park. Before I get to it, I pass a restaurant floating in the middle of a large pond. I borrow a cell phone from a man leisurely speaking with his wife. This is something my father warned me never to do myself for the phone will be stolen. But this man is unsuspecting and even berates me for trying to pay him.
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There are some meaningful works in the museum. One series, by Liu Dahong, depicts four temples: the temples of Tao, Confucius, Buddha, and Science. Each tableau depicts a view of the altar, but the scenes humorously differ in the architectural styles, the characters and idols, their activities and arrangement, and even the color tone. The Buddha temple for example is fitted with Tibetan horn-blowers, praying commoners, and what seems like a band of bandits pulling a rope around the gold head of the Buddha statue. In the center appears to be a bronze statue of a topless woman chiselled in classical Greek style. Likewise, the Confucian temple is lined with ultra-studious students, calligraphical debris, uniformed soldier-nationalists, and heavenly sunlight breaking through the earthly walls. So that Dahong is not merely depicting the presence of multiple Chinese cosmologies but rather, if only as a starting point, the way these traditions permeate the whole structure of Chinese society’s customs, aspirations, and political economy.
A second series shows two photos. One is a black-and-white shot of a farmer pulling a plow with his hands. Multiple strings extend from his hands as he tugs on the earth; a sparse line of trees of varying forms forms his background. The second is of a man in contemporary dress – the loose fit suggests either a hip-hop style or a janitorial occupation – in an interior, underground concrete space. Lines of white rope extend from his hands as he pulls a mass of boxes plastic-wrapped in indigo-blue.
The role of the artist in these cases is very evident to me. In making some sense of the cacaphony, in asking where we are headed and if it is desirable. In drawing links to the past. The exhibition is titled “The World of Others” and its curatory abstract communicates the classic theme of wandering at the crossroads of contemporary culture. It is not about the marginal “Other” of cultural studies but rather simply of you and I and who we are and what we are doing. It is about Shanghai and China too of course, as it relates to others elsewhere and here. So a third piece that I wish to feature is constructed of consolidated oil fibres. The mass of mesh piles up, intertwining and rising, but droops from the weight. A human walks very carefully with feet and hands at the tip; he is far from the base, both vertically and horizontally. For the tip has leaned so far it is now a thin thread reaching horizontally out above nothing.
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That night, I return to MOCA Shanghai for a penthouse party. My dad comes with me, and since I do not know whether or not the party is private, he urges me to speak in a foreign tongue. We pass the guard of People’s Park without too much difficulty. But we wonder why he must ask us where we are going. The park at least should be public. A number of “public places” have so far been closed to me, such as Jiaotong University’s library, and the Grand Theatre when all the people were exiting. In any case, it turns out that this party is open to the public, but there is no need for me to switch out of French or English.
It seems that I have perforated through to the world of expats and returnees. The house music scintillates in the room where drinks are served from an improvised counter. I meet fellow voyagers in quick succession – it is as easy as at any private party. To speak the right language is like two men nodding in mutual validation.
Many here are young professionals working in multinational firms or perhaps in an embassy. A few have grown up in Shanghai, and a few others have come to further their career. I speak at some length with two musicians. They are in their mid-to-late-twenties and from Vancouver. They are a young man and a young woman, though they do not seem to be a couple, musically or otherwise. Both work in electronica; they are here for their DJ friend – every Saturday there is a party at a different venue. The young man tells me he used to work in a bank, after doing a degree in financial engineering. It is the Asian American parent’s dream, as we both know, but he would rather spend his energies on making music, even if he’d have to live more simply. We also both know this story well.
The young lady, also Chinese and a former Vancouver resident, studied film sound production as a compromise after failing economics courses. But after a menial stint in foley production, she took off for Shanghai, where the opportunity lay. Both musicians wrote off Vancouver as a desolate market for electronica while at the same time being artistically saturated. Fly west and find the greenfield that is Shanghai. Anything can happen, money is everywhere, rich people are everywhere to support you. And there is a huge and growing market of listeners open to innovation. For now, the young woman supports herself with the help of DJ gigs once a week at a nearby lounge and it pays 10 000 yuan a month.
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I spend the rest of the evening with a large and friendly group of expatriots, most of whom are from France. While still at the penthouse party, a young woman named Anastasie sits to my right. Cheerful and full of questions, she tells me about her life here in Shanghai. She provides legal counsel for a chemicals firm based in France. It has been about six months since she was first transferred here.
Having grown up in a small town, Shanghai still seems fast-paced. We agree that the air here is too dense and it is difficult to find a place to breathe, and be away from the continuous activity. Nonetheless, she is happy here, and slowly taking lessons in Chinese, even though she has so far interacted little with the locals.
Her friend is less optimistic. While we taxi to Burger King, he bikes: perhaps he has seen more. His impression of Shanghai is of a general superficiality. While one can certainly discern the progression of commodification and consumerism here, I find his statement to be too simplistic. Because behind the spectacle are labourers, nurses, accounts people, even the waiters bringing him his drinks at the party – for many of these people, a trendy image is not so high on their list of priorities. It would certainly fall below their aspiration that their parents retire in dignity, that their children be able to find fair and decent work, or that China be autonomous in her cultural appropriation. Wei may be picking the right colours for a marketing firm (my father’s company supplies colour communication tools), but for her the meaning of this work is much more dense than a simple participation in visual culture. I cannot know this place without speaking to its people and learning about their values and friendships. To describe Shanghai as superficial is akin to depicting China as Confucian, Maoist, or Taoist – it is insufficient. It is only to see the surface of a tapestry that I find as chaotic and awful as it is beautiful and coherent.
A young Shanghainese with whom I was dancing has asked me to go to Mao. I would like to remain on this elevated plane, this superstratum of Shanghai a little blind to the underside, but I am too tired to go clubbing tonight.



[1] Photo courtesy of www.flickr.com/photos/2_dogs/205021735.
[2] He, S., Wu, F. (2007). Neighborhood changes and residential differentiation in Shanghai. In F. Wu (Ed.), China’s Emerging Cities: The Making of New Urbanism (pp. 185-209). Routledege: New York.
[3] Tian, Y. Y., Wong, C. (2007). Large urban redevelopment projects and socio-spatial stratification in Shanghai. In F. Wu (Ed.), China’s Emerging Cities: The Making of New Urbanism (pp.210-232). Routledege: New York.
[4] E.g.: He & Wu 2007; Tian & Wong 2007.
[5] Map coutesy of www.likealocal.cn/shanghai-districts-explained.
[6] Wang, S., Guo, C. (2007). A tale of two cities: Restructuring of retail capital and production of new consumption spaces in Beijing and Shanghai. In F. Wu (Ed.), China’s Emerging Cities: The Making of New Urbanism (pp. 256-283). Routledege: New York.
[7] Lu, D. (2006). Remaking Chinese Urban Form: Modernity, Scarcity and Space. Routledge: London.
[8] Ibid.
[9] Tian & Wong 2007.
[10] Tian & Wong 2007.
[11] He & Wu 2007.
[12] Pan, T. (2005). Historical memory, community-building and place-making in neighborhood Shanghai. In L. Ma & F. Wu (Eds.), Restructuring the Chinese City: Changing Society, Economy and Space (pp. 123-136).
[13] Photo courtesy of www.flickr.com/photos/ericfirley/532802767.
[14] Rudolph, J., Lu, H. (2008). Mirrored reflections: Place identity formation in Taipei and Shanghai. In J. Logan (Ed.), Urban China in Transition (pp. 161-178). Blackwell Publishing: Malden, MA.
[15] Photo courtesy of www.flickr.com/photos/2_dogs/144839622.
[16] Photo courtesy of www.flickr.com/photos/tannenberg/1578244266.
[17] Photo courtesy of www.flickr.com/photos/wangjue_2005/385144161.
[18] Rudolph & Lu 2008.
[19] Photo courtesy of www.flickr.com/photos/justinbrown/2595243739.
[20] Photo courtesy of www.nationalgeographic.com.
[21] Photo courtesy of www.flickr.com/photos/2_dogs/50292513.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Tokyo Journal

Wednesday, June 25

We arrive at Narita International Airport in the mid-afternoon. We shuffle over to immigration and place ourselves in the line for foreigners. A short and wide-faced older man walks to and fro reminding us to fill in the back of our entry card. In gestural English, he then animates the aliens into the available slots.



Blazer-less and theatrical, he is a beautiful complement to the clean, straight lines of the airport handrails and staff; my brother and I wonder if he does this all day, and whether this is the impression that the authorities want us to begin the city with.

Soon we get our first glimpses of the city through the glass of our Limousine Taxi – that is, the bus that will drop its passengers at their respective hotels. We see old houses and intermittent rice fields – how sustainable, we think. But we are still a good hour from our destination, and the rice fields soon turn into industries – the most unique of which is a blue-skinned factory with the word “Human” printed en face. We cross several bridges and the leftward landscape fills with crates and cranes of all colors. We are approaching the city proper; the houses become taller and our highway rises and dips as it must evade the thickening web of transit.

But we notice here how disappointingly bland the architecture looks. The apartment buildings differ in height, orientation and at times color, but they are ubiquitously concrete and the windows and balconies and stairwells feel as if belonging to the same family. Functional modernity had apparently filled the vacuum left by the devastating firebombing of World War II. Aside from that, the multiple layers of expressway and railway provide a futuristic vision of urban efficiency, where mass movements need not obstruct the open flow of the street network. But what kinds of aesthetics are implicated by additional levels of structure and also of view?

--

It is night and my family and I stroll into a set of narrower streets within the Akasaka district where we are staying. The streets are busy with small noodle shops, the happy romantic music coming out of gambling machines, heels clicking, unbuttoned blazers, and now and then we might hear hints of a more familiar language. Pressed by indecision, we settle for an “American-style” menu underground. It is a very tight space and we get the only four-person table. Many men sit alone at the bar and some stay with a newspaper; we notice later that we were never invited to kneel in the back tatami room. In any case the waitress arrives. She appears South Asian and as such her effortless Japanese disorients me. What is she doing here? She is brown she should understand English! How do other Japanese see her?



Thursday, June 26

On our first whole day in Tokyo I decide to spend the morning in search of a library. Places that house unseen spaces – such as those more communicable by words than by physical sight – as in the case of bookstores and universities – appeal to me especially in a foreign sphere. They reassure me that there are others here who cherish an internal space, a space that by definition is hidden amidst the physical public (as far as I am concerned, at least).

I soon realize that it is not easy to find one’s way without the help of a Tokyoite. My internet searches reveal a nearby library and this information is even presented in English. But Google Maps is completely Japanese when one zooms into Japan. Not willing to sequentially compare symbols, I shortly find myself sitting across a thoroughly beautiful and helpful young lady at the Tourist Information desk. It is two subway stations from here, it is not the one I found, and I have a printed map in hand.


I stand near a column so as not to get into the other travelers’ way. But the ticket machines and signs are intuitive enough with a bit of observation. No one notices me; secretly I smile.

One begins to notice that they are in an extended metropolis when they burrow out after a period of rapid transit in a cueless passage. And they see that the buildings are still tall and glassy and the streets are wide with trucks and taxis. But now I notice a few more details. There is scarcely a car parked in sight; this is because the side lanes must move. And roads carry more public and freight transportation than personal vehicles. In other words, it is the realization of the vision implied in Montreal’s 2004 Plan with its policies minimizing certain highway infrastructure while at the same time privileging bus and freight movement.

Curiously, there were rarely any large trucks to be seen on Tokyo roads; this was as peculiar as the survival of smaller-scale industries and grocery shops. Do the particular institutional and cultural factors mediate a ‘cutthroat’ global capitalism, or is it more accurate that these elements take part to create a system of transaction? Land values play a part too; would it be naïve to point out how elegant it is that the ecology of urban density here coincides with the survival of the little[1]?

--

In the afternoon my mother, my grandmother, my brother and I meet up with a business friend of my father’s[2]. Although he possesses four personal vehicles, he arrives by metro. We follow him to his Tokyo showroom. His main office is in Yokohama, where he lives, but his internet wholesaling was suffering because buyers wanted to see and touch what they were ordering.


The showroom is a small and extremely expensive space located on the second floor of a four-story building. Clustered around are other businesses in the design field. The locational advantage is evident, though I wondered why these low-rise units would persist.

Nearby is a glossy shopping district and we walk through it to the rail station. One stop later, we begin our promenade through Harajuku, the famous “youth district” of Tokyo. This alternate space is reinforced by formal and symbolic differentiations from nearby Shibuya, another highly consumerist and youthful landscape that will be our next destination. In Harajuku, the green and white and yellow flower-arches demarcating Takeshita Street protect a busy otherworldly space in the way that Disneyland gates might mean for children stepping through. The street is narrow and stone-paved; no cars are allowed to come through. The shops vary in their form and are about three stories high – high enough to give the coziness of cover but not so high as to be imposing or independent. Indeed, Takeshita may strike a stroller as an old town – but except for its built form, there is something very un-old and at the same time very un-youthful about it. For I think that to be old or adolescent means to be marginal and, despite fashions that astonish, allude and hybridize, this place is playful without being subversive. For sure, it challenges the dress codes of Japan’s assembly line human capital, but one cannot get around the fact that this is a safe, consumerist space. You dye your hair in fluorescent hues and purchase Victorian-hemmed miniskirts; you highlight the visual exchange of postmodern capitalism[3].

In Shibuya we stop at Tokyu Hands, a perpetually crowded department store with an emphasis on do-it-yourself items such as hobby tools and stationery of the most subtle discriminations. Bewildered, I split with my family and debark into the streets. The streets are refreshingly do-it-yourself; it is still a very commercial landscape but there are no signs holding a linear passage. Paved and narrow cobbled roads wind through a hilly topography; underground venues flank vivacious shortcut descents. I stumble into what appears through the tinted glass to be a cyber spa. I walk past a posh counter and brush through rows of black cubicles. Some of the cubicles are unoccupied, and inside one is a computer, a flatscreen TV, and either an office chair or a tatami mat on an elevated floor. A couple walks past me; they hold a bento box and a bowl; they take off their shoes and shuffle inside. Further, there are “relaxation lounges”, showers, and places to buy food and rent media. I want to stay in a box for a few hours. The tinted glass also silences the noise, the din of too much music and screens and conversations and taxis and pamphlets. Some, I learn later, will stay much longer than that.



Friday, June 27

In the morning we join a half-day tour. The tour guide points out the men in suits outside the bus: they are the salarymen, she says. They are tired, she says, because they must squeeze themselves for an average commuting time of between 60 and 90 minutes[4]. They are tired, I think to myself, because they were out drinking the night before. Because the many dining and beverage spaces in the narrow-laned Akasaka entertainment district were still lively with loose-tied salarymen and their colleagues even after the last midnight metros. It was on such a train too that I lived the sardine shove of the Tokyo subway experience. Of course, these night owls represent a minority – a metropolitan area of 35 million can spare a few hundred thousand partying suits – but maybe these suits express something, some dreariness the body needs to party out.

Soon we are on the observation deck of Tokyo Tower, a TV and radio tower and Japan’s tallest artificial structure. I ask the tour guide why, as one gazes in all directions, there are only clusters of skyscrapers. This is planned; like several largest cities in China it is a preference to create several downtowns rather than one. Perhaps there is a planning graph that will show the parabolic arc of agglomeration benefits? Perhaps this explains why the design district we visited yesterday was highly valued yet only lightly built up. In any case, I should not think of transiting from Shibuya to Shinjuku as taking a train from one borough of Montreal to another; it is better to think of it as riding from downtown Toronto to downtown Vancouver, only that they are a few stops apart. Indeed the tour terminates at Ginza – the “5th Avenue of Tokyo” – except that I saw Gucci-s and the Prada-s yesterday in Shinagawa, near where the little design companies were.

By this point the consumerism is starting to get to me. In each direction an air-conditioned space solely to sell. High-heeled eyes scanning for the next accessory. You want to shout for it all to come down, to talk, and touch.

--

It is a few hours later. My brother and I come out of the Edo-Tokyo Museum. We are in a neighborhood called Ryogoku which is a good distance to the northeast of where our travels have taken us thus far. Daniel (my brother) goes back to the hotel, leaving me to ambulate at my leisure. I take many photos because there is something of beauty here. I photograph the museum, an architectural trophy. Nearby is a tall school with open windows – one hears the children making contact in a gym or two inside. Along the sidewalk there are delicate white guardrails on one side and stone edges on the other. Beyond the stonework is meticulous landscaping with trees and bushes that fill and humble the space. Here is a tall office complex and a few workers walk out along the brick path. Here is an old, traditional house – you know with the corrugated black shingles and the sliding paper doors – that now acts as a fish market. A woman picks out the weeds that stick out between the bricks. Circling around I see that some of the school play-sounds have been coming from outside. It is true that this is a special place, but when I cross a main road the atmosphere remains.

I take more pictures.


But I cannot capture the feeling


Is it the neighborhood shops in the old buildings. Potted plants are left in front. A bike too. Is it how the old is mixed with more recent, taller buildings, some of which echo a brick theme. Is it the rail line that cuts through, the intermittent strollers and bicycles in no rush and peaceful looking. Is it the overhead power lines and tree branches and clotheslines and multiple levels of public space – that provide a canopy reminiscent of a friendly concrete jungle I knew long ago. In Hong Kong – I was very young and the buildings and squares and parks and people and old open windows are what the meadow or the river or the barn must be for someone else. I decide that if I ever move to Tokyo, I would move here. Strange – to feel a sense of home so quickly – to imagine an alternate childhood and commuting back here – to know the feeling I would get living here, returning here after a day of work.

--

It is slightly past midnight and Shibuya is emptying itself of young people. This is discouraging; is the party someplace else? But Daniel and I spot two foreigners; following them the tide turns. We are led to a club district; a later crowd is streaming here.

My brother taxis home and I walk up and down wide and narrow lanes looking for a specific venue. A metal door opens to my side. It is not it, but I descend.

The venue is ginormous: cells on top of one another looking into a humungous central atrium. This, in combination with the collective dancing oriented towards the video jockeys, is exhilarating. But then I notice a significant number of single Caucasian males. The way they approach the situation is no different than in North America, but I do not like it here. Why is that?



Saturday, June 28

The next morning we are at the Tsukiji fish market. Once again, I bask in the courtesy all round me. It is strange, but I am beginning to smile – first. I become wanting to be polite, to re-give the gift, to uphold this unique civilization. I have been cleaning slight spills, and I did not appropriate the magazines from the Limousine Taxi that first day. You sense how much attention is put into the environment, and you do not wish to cause these workers pain.

I think back on the night before. Of the young Japanese in the club. Yes, the young women smoked and some had mean eyes; the young men were dressed typically cool, tattered with wild long hair. But when spoken to, the concern for social kindness would return; the security guard even apologized when asked for a hand stamp! Is this why I did not like the brash Americans, notwithstanding the history? Is this why it is so difficult for a foreigner to become accepted as a Tokyoite?

But this social system may also be why the Tokyo girls responded to the Western advances. Think of the beautiful young women standing in department stores, smiling and bowing like status curtains. The courtesy is mutual, but the hierarchy is evident. Often in the movies, the female lead is heroic for her undying love for a wayward lover; the husband neglects or cheats or abuses but may ultimately repent. The noble woman is to suffer silently as the wild man comes to his senses. I do not appreciate this – I do not like it in the hotel in the restaurant in the airport when the male client speaks curtly and the hostess the waitress the attendant must apologize and work efficiently head low. I do not like it that they must smile and say subordinating formalities when the person to whom they speak does not listen or respond with any positive acknowledgment. A Japanese woman may seek a Western partner for his enlightened principles, but women’s rights in the West exist because of strong, free-thinking women. It makes no difference if your man is Canadian if he is looking for a submissive Japanese and you continue to play that part. I do like a society where others are placed first, but such a society will be precarious in the company of nations that do not share that ideal[5].









Sunday, June 29

I am on the plane to Hong Kong. I awoke at five thirty in the morning, a good hour before the wake-up call. Having not been to Shinjuku I hurried down to the subway. There was not much time so I alighted off at the first Shinjuku station. But there were few souls on the streets at six. Far from the downtown I could only savor some old shops and a few taller offices. I would have to come back another time.

On the train back there were a few more people. They were trying to steal a few more minutes of sleep before their Sunday workday.

I select a movie to watch. It is about a young, debt-ridden gambler, a falling J-Pop idol and her fans, a businessman who hits the streets, and a failed comic. The first character evinces the immense pressure to succeed and the perpetuating guilt when one fails. The businessman, in a similar feeling, abandons society. What the film then portrays is the longing for acceptance and intimacy in each of the characters, who are willing to confer this to one another. But this willingness is not communicated; one’s love for another’s flourishing is rather understood as a judgement of who they should be.

The movie is called Flowers in the Mire, or something to that effect. I think of the numerous gardens and public parks in the city of the film, Tokyo. The architecture of this city may be somewhat dull and grey, but it is the unimposing backdrop for much valued greenery. I also think of the contemporary art spaces I visited in Ginza. Like the straight lines of the airport handrails and staff, the orderliness here is exciting in its potential for creative juxtaposition. While I often find (North American) contemporary art to be a nonsensical play of referential wit, here the photos and drawings felt beautiful. The photos illuminated shadow-spaces and with its theme drew together spaces of similar light. The drawings of so many flowers on a white sheet brought out the contemporaneous existence of ignored landscapes of minutiae. Carefully depicted flowers in a studio in Ginza, like a blazer-less customs official dancing about in Narita. The authorities were right; they had given us the right impression.



[1] Perhaps. Further discussion has made me less idealistic about the above points. Part of the reason why few people drive is that traffic can be very congested. Also, the scarcity of large trucks may be due to better planning – where large freight is unloaded at the edge of cities and then distributed in smaller parcels to central parts – rather than a case of a radically different economy. Still, commuters are able to leave their cars at home because of a highly developed public transit system, and little shops and eateries persist.
[2] My father was in Hong Kong during our Tokyo trip.
[3] This is not to write off postmodern culture and for instance the musical recontextualizations that will be heard in Harajuku’s backstreets; it is only that I was finding the visual commodity focus of Takeshita Street to be excessive.
[4] Actually, a recent article in Asahi Shinbun presented the average commuting time for Tokyo workers to be only 67 minutes.
[5] Nations have ideals but it is the individuals that must live or not live them out. Anything I write about a society is true only insofar as its individuals conform to it. There will be many exceptions.