This week, Kaiser and Jeremy continue their conversation with Ambassador Chas W. Freeman, Jr. (see part 1 here), and focus on how he got interested in China, his fascination with the Chinese language, his early diplomatic career, his extraordinary experience as chief interpreter during Richard Nixon’s historic visit to China in 1972, and his prescient predictions of how China would evolve after the normalization of relations with the U.S.
Stay tuned for the third part of this interview, coming next week!
Allegiance
Sauced: American cooking in China
The China meltdown
Air pollution and climate change
While we're here: China stories from a writers' colony
Out of Africa: The swifts of Beijing
Live at the Bookworm, part two: What's ahead for China?
Live at the Bookworm, part one: How has Beijing changed over the years?
Fokke Obbema on China's rising power and the nation's relations with the West
Tu Youyou and the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Edmund Backhouse in the long view of history
Sinica archive: Beijing's Great Leap Forward
Rogier Creemers on cyber Leninism and the political culture of the Chinese internet
Comfort women and the struggle for reparations
Under the Dome
LGBT China
The Islamic State and China
Bo Xilai: The Trial of the Century
The one-child policy, plus the African community in Guangzhou
The extremes of Chinese media, plus Chinese internet humor
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