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Shanghai 1842-1949: Library Edition

Shanghai 1842-1949: Library Edition

List Price: $56.95
Your Price: $56.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: superficial
Review: Reading Stella Dong's Shanghai you'd figure that everyone was either: a Foreign businessman/adventurer, a missionary, gang member/kuomindong member, communist organizer/fellow traveller, hooker .... you get my drift.

Shanghai is a great city, with great people, and while the above no doubt were among the forces that shaped it - Ms Dong passed on the prosaic aspects of lives lead to focus on the lurid.

It does read well, but provides nothing new. OK for someone with absolutely no knowledge of the subject.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: superficial
Review: Reading Stella Dong's Shanghai you'd figure that everyone was either: a Foreign businessman/adventurer, a missionary, gang member/kuomindong member, communist organizer/fellow traveller, hooker .... you get my drift.

Shanghai is a great city, with great people, and while the above no doubt were among the forces that shaped it - Ms Dong passed on the prosaic aspects of lives lead to focus on the lurid.

It does read well, but provides nothing new. OK for someone with absolutely no knowledge of the subject.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A poorly researched pop history of Shanghai
Review: Rise and Fall is the latest in a long series of books on the antics of those wild and wooly foreigners who inhabited the city in the supposed glory days of "Old Shanghai." According to the press plugs, Dong spent a total of ten years researching the book. Considering that span of time and the slew of excellently researched and well-written books on various aspects of Shanghai's history published in recent years, one would expect this study to be, at the very least, an informed digest of the extant literature.

On this and other fronts, Rise and Fall disappoints. It offers neither penetrating new insights nor useful synthesis of existing studies. Dong paints far too broad a portrait to attempt the depth of certain earlier monographs. Rise and Fall merely summarizes, and readers with any prior knowledge of Shanghai's history will find themselves scanning ahead in a futile search for new information.

That Rise and Fall makes for a passably good read can be attributed to the intrinsic appeal of Shanghai's story. Rarely before or since has so much compellingly chaotic history been compacted into so short a span of time. Shanghai was the great melting pot, a motley array of quirky characters and outlandish stories. The "Paris of the East" was Eden, Babylon, Sodom and Gomorrah all rolled into one. It would be difficult to write a history of Shanghai that wasn't interesting.

Dong introduces us to some of the many colorful characters who comprise the intriguing tapestry that was Shanghai. We hear briefly of the families of Sephardic Jews who were the Robber Barons of Shanghai's business world, amassing fabulous wealth through shrewd speculation in opium and real estate. They were rivaled only by that giant of the British Empire, Jardine and Matheson. We are teased by tales of lavish parties and indecent opulence. But tease is all that the writer does: She brings up a subject, discusses it for a page or two, and then, just as the reader's interest is aroused, drops it and moves on to the next. The seasoned Shanghai aficionado, if he hasn't quit the book yet, will be wincing at all that gets left out, while the newcomer will be left with an itch to know what happened next -- an itch that goes sadly unscratched. Although Dong had the privilege of meeting with such luminaries of Shanghai's history as Emily Hahn, Irene Kuhn, and Helen Foster Snow, as well as descendents of other notables, she failed to translate these interviews into any fresh perspectives.

Rise and Fall presents itself as a "popular history" rather than a serious academic work, and makes for a light, unstrenuous read. As such, it omits the introduction explaining what methods were used and what choices were made, and why. Likewise suggestive of a lack of substance are the large print font and the total absence of citations.

With its focus on the foreign factor in old Shanghai, Rise and Fall at times treats the Chinese as bit players on their own stage. As in many similar books on Old Shanghai, the foreign characters are treated with loving romanticism, while the Shanghainese are reduced to stereotypes: the gangster, the prostitute, the comprador, the coolie, the intellectual, the movie star.

Dong makes little effort to portray, let alone investigate, the richly complex "native" society that emerged in Old Shanghai, as the city's residence tried to reconcile a number of conflicting influences and demands. Harriet Sergeant's excellent and in-depth Shanghai, although also focusing on the foreign factor and at times patronizing towards the "locals," at least features a long, sympathetic, and well-constructed chapter on "the Chinese". Rise and Fall includes a handful of the more famous urbanites -- as Lu Xun, Green Gang head Du Yuesheng, Chiang Kai-shek, and the Soong family -- in her catalogue of characters, but overall the treatment is cursory.

Rise and Fall is generally aimed to entertain an audience that has never before read anything about Shanghai. But it reduces Shanghai's complex and multifaceted history to a distorted and sensationalized stereotype of lurid decadence. The Communist Party propounds this version of things to demonstrate how much better things have gotten since. Ironically, what the authorities issue for the sake of propaganda, foreign writers -- and Dong is no exception -- reiterate for the sake of titillation, with the identical effect of creating a simplified and misleading vision of Old Shanghai.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Evocative and highly readable
Review: Stella Dong has brought a vanished world back to life. I was fascinated by her account of Shanghai in its earlier incarnation. They say that Shanghai today has returned to what it was-the "Paris of the East." But having visited Shanghai many times over the last fifteen years, the city seems to becoming a generic version of any 21st century modern metrolis. Pre-war Shanghai with its glamour, intrigue and style was something special. Save your money-instead of buying a ticket to Shanghai, read this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Evocative and highly readable
Review: Stella Dong has brought a vanished world back to life. I was fascinated by her account of Shanghai in its earlier incarnation. They say that Shanghai today has returned to what it was-the "Paris of the East." But having visited Shanghai many times over the last fifteen years, the city seems to becoming a generic version of any 21st century modern metrolis. Pre-war Shanghai with its glamour, intrigue and style was something special. Save your money-instead of buying a ticket to Shanghai, read this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A splendid and highly readable work of history
Review: Stella Dong presents a well-researched and accessible history of a city that exerts a powerful fascination over Westerners. A Chinese-American journalist who appears familiar with both the Chinese and Western worlds, she deftly conveys the moral ambiguities implicit in a city whose founding is based upon greed and depradation. The book covers a tumultuous time in China's history, but Dong does a praiseworthy job of guiding the reader through the period's complexities. "Shanghai" excels in its portraiture of the chronically stressed yet chronically interdependent relationship between the Chinese underclass and their colonial masters in Shanghai. It also shows the deformations of the person-to-person relationship of man and mistress, man and coolie, taipan and comprador, were exactly reflected at the level of China-Western relations. The authors narrative skills are more than up to the standard that this enigmatic city deserves. Dong pulls us from the swampy wasteland that was Shanghai of the early 1800's, to the rich and cosmopolitan city under Japanese siege in the early 1940's. But it's her eye and ear for the speech of each era that, for me, provided the real through-line of this book. No matter what year or era, there is always a juicy overhead comment or speech that gives give body and flesh to the characters in question. A splendid and highly readable work of history.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Extensive overview of a fascinating city
Review: Stella Dong presents an extraordinarily researched account of Shanghai's years as a Chinese, international and colonial city. The elements that have converged to create the feel and history of this most cosmopolitan of cities are extraordinarily diverse and Ms. Dong makes a heroic and highly readable effort to convey these elements. There is something for everyone, Occidental to Oriental, but if one comes from a closed Asian or Western perspective one is bound to be alienated by something in this book.
Personally, I found some elements of the narrative tedious such as the seemingly tangential emphasis on Chinese gangland figures. On the other hand, I found Ms.Dong's coverage of the City's role in the West's dominance of China during the colonial period nuanced and enlightening. I also found her treatment of the City's role in the achievement of Chinese independence and cohesion during the early twentieth century via the Kuomintang and Communist Party very readable and compelling. The book contributed positively to my layman's understanding of Chinese history.
If I was to divide the book in thirds, I found the first and last parts great but the middle a little slow going.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Solid History of a Sinful City
Review: Stella Dong's "Shanghai 1842-1949: The Rise and Fall of a Decadent City" is a thorough overview of China's most notorious city during its most notorious era.

As Dong's text explains, Shanghai rose to prominence in the late 19th century as a treaty port. Several nations-Britain, US, and France- had gained special status through a series of treaties and thus were allowed to conduct business as if the city were their own. And there were plenty of businesses to conduct--from the importing of opium to the exporting of tea and other goods. Each colonial group lived in its own area complete with its own customs and social hierarchies.

Likewise, with the increased affluence of the city, a wealthy Chinese class also emerged, though once again it tended to live and socialize only within its own boundaries.

With so many people making so much money and so few (legal) rules to follow, Shanghai eventually became a swinging city of sin. By the 1920's, the city became synonmous with sex, opium, jazz, brothels, and pleasure in just about any form. As Dong notes, while the sinners broke all legal rules, they still followed the social stratification of the city: the british patronized British brothels, the Chinese went to Chinese brothels and so on.

Of course, with the invasion by Japan and then the fall to the Communists, the good times ended in Shanghai and most of the colonials left. I felt that Dong could have kept the reader more abreast of Chinese history in the earlier parts of the book to make the latter events (e.g., why the country was so open to communism when a city like Shanghai was not) more understandable. In addition, she introduces certain colorful Shanghai characaters-the writer Emily Hahn for instance-and then loses them.
However, this book is a good, workmanlike introduction to a very interesting city in a very interesting time. I would recommend it to those readers looking for a general overview of the history of the city. If you want more depth, you may want to read this book in conjunction with more rigorous studies or simply look elsewhere.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Could be better!
Review: Stella Dong's book on Shanghai, while interesting, is limited by Ms. Dong's mediocre and repetitive writing and sensationalist tone. Individual parts of the book can be very interesting, but are not organized into a well written and cohent whole. If your looking for a serious historical work with some good analysis this is not the book for you.

On the other hand, it is a decent intoduction for someone planning to travel to Shanghai.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Could be better!
Review: Stella Dong's book on Shanghai, while interesting, is limited by Ms. Dong's mediocre and repetitive writing and sensationalist tone. Individual parts of the book can be very interesting, but are not organized into a well written and cohent whole. If your looking for a serious historical work with some good analysis this is not the book for you.

On the other hand, it is a decent intoduction for someone planning to travel to Shanghai.


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