When conducting interviews with local government officials in Chongqing
last week, many of the times I felt like I were Jon Snow in Game of Thrones
and my interviewee his wildling girl friend: “You know nothing” is what I
constantly got. “You know,” I was told once, “generally we local governments do
not accept interview requests from scholars, not to mention students. Because
you don’t know anything.” On another occasion, when I tried to introduce myself
as a Ph. D student of Political Science, my interviewee laughed: “What
political science? Here we don’t have political science. All we have is
politics.”
Today is the eighth day
since I landed in China to conduct field research for my dissertation. I wanted
to gain some local perspective (versus that of the central government) on my
topic, so I travelled to Chongqing, the city in China’s western
hinterland that has been the country’s fourth municipality since 1997. It was also the epicenter of the political earthquake that shook China
in 2012, when Bo Xilai, the then Party Chief of Chongqing and a “princeling”
who had been expected by many to take a key leadership position in the 2012
leadership transition, was expelled from the Chinese Communist Party.
Securing interviews with local officials,
however, turned out to be extremely difficult. Early this month, the state
issued a new document that forbids Chinese journalists to provide information
to foreign media or share news through personal social media accounts. Which,
along with the intense anti-corruption and mass-line educational campaigns,
reminds me again how the political climate has been tightened since Xi Jinping
took office. Fortunately, after digging really deep into my personal relations
and promising anonymity, I finally was able to talk face-to-face with a couple
of officials—not in their offices, but over the dinner table. And I had to
drink “baijiu”—the Chinese “white liquor,”--every time I wanted to get some
answers to my questions.
But except for the baijiu (I got really
heavy-headed after one very small glass), I generally enjoyed the City of
Chongqing. When I was not working, I would take a stroll around the
neighborhood of my hotel or take a cab to the downtown area. China’s “mountain
city” along the Yangtze River, Chongqing is built on hills and boasts splendid
natural scenes along the riverbank. At Hongyadong, an recreation of old
Chongqing that clings to the side of a mountain, you’ll find yourself coming
out from the elevator to just another street. On the other hand, modern skyscrapers
along the Yangtze would remind one of Hong Kong or New York.
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| Along the Yangtze |
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| Hongyadong, a tourist spot that clings to the side of a mountain |
Whenever possible, I would ask residents about
how satisfied they were with the local government now that Bo had been gone. To my surprise, most
of them complained. A grocery store owner said succinctly: “It’s now a mess.” A
taxi driver told me that many infrastructure projects had been halted since Bo
was replaced, “I wish they could do it faster, so that the city would be in a
better shape.” A primary school teacher said she wished the mobile patrol
platforms were still there--when Bo was in office, he ordered 500 mobile patrol
platforms be created to make the city safer, but they were nowhere to be found
now.
It seemed that all things bearing Bo’s signature
had been removed from Chongqing. In 2008, Bo Xilai launched
the “Sing Red” campaign that organized people to sing the so-called “red songs,”
popular patriotic and political
songs from the Maoist era, including the Cultural Revolution.
The campaign also included the study of “red classics” -- books and films about
the Party’s revolutionary past. At the height of the campaign, red banners and
posters could be seen everywhere in the city. Bo also ordered local TV channels
to cut the number of dramas and stop airing commercials so as to make way for public
service ads, news programs, and “red programs” that promoted “red culture.” But
now no trace of the “Sing Red” campaign could be found. I could watch as many
commercials as I wanted on the Chongqing satellite channels.
| A tea commercial on Chongqing TV |
I was curious about the fate of the “Xilai trees”—the
20 million ginkgo trees that Bo spent billions of yuan to transplant to
Chongqing primarily because they were his personal favorite—after Bo’s
downfall. I was told that many of them did not survive the local climate
anyway; but those that survived were still there. “The ginkgos don’t provide
shade. We need shade here. Chongqing is too hot in the summer.” A popsicle
vender told me. I did see some Ginkgo trees along my way back to the hotel—they
were beautiful trees but it was true that they could not provide the
much-needed shade for Chongqing’s seething summer. Local people’s favorite tree
was still the banyan, which had historically been the City’s most common shade
trees.
| Ginkgo trees: left of the road |
The Jiefangbei (People’s Liberation Monument) shopping
plaza was a really interesting place to be at: to me, it was an epitome of many
contradicting urges of the Chinese society today: market economy and communist
ideologies, western lifestyle and national pride, a revolutionary past and a globalized
future, and principles and practices.
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| Time Square-style shopping plaza; the People's Liberation Monument in the Center. |
The 27-meter tall People’s Liberation Monument was
built in 1945 to commemorate China’s victory over the Japanese in WWII, and was
refurbished in 1997 when Chongqing became a municipality.
The 24,000 square meters shopping plaza was
built in the same year, apparently modeled after Time Square in New York.
Standing in front of the Monument, I was surrounded by shiny high-rises, huge
LED signs, luxury stores, financial companies, and shopping centers. One of the
high-rise buildings was named “New York, New York” and looked like a smaller
version of the Empire State Building of NYC.
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| High-rise buildings at the Jiefangbei Shopping Plaza. The one on the left is "New York, New York." |
Facing the Monument was a Gucci store and a Starbucks, which
reminded me of the Starbucks in Forbidden City in Beijing that was forced to
close down after Rui Chenggang, a CCTV anchorman, led an online campaign to
evict it from the Fobidden City in 2007. Rui had since been hailed as a national hero
by many. Earlier this month, Rui was taken away for anti-corruption
investigation.
| Gucci, Sstarbucks and the People's Liberation Monument |
Several hundred meters away from the center of
the plaza was a construction site. The posters on the fences read: “There would
not have been the new China without the Communist Party. [meiyou gongchandang
jiu meiyou xinzhongguo]” It was the same information Bo tried to convey several
years ago. But he probably went too far, and too fast.
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| Left: Communist Party Members are on the Road to a Dream Fulfilled; center: Without the Communist Party, there would not have been the New China; right: Morality Matters in China |
(Chunhua Chen is a third year Ph.D student of Political Science. This summer, she is doing field research on her dissertation in China supported by a Sigur Center Grant for Asian Field Research for summer 2014.)

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