Class participation

Simpson, Peter Phillips

Peter Phillips Simpson CLASS PARTICIPATION Report from Beijing Thanks to a Fulbright scholarship, I am teaching political philosophy at Beijing's Renmin (People's) University of China this year....

...he reasoned...
...When I make this comparison, as I did on a number of occasions at the English Corner (which meets weekly for anyone who wants to practice English), the listeners gasp with astonishment, not unmixed with amusement (Did he really say that...
...One-party rule inhibits discussion, but so does the traditional closeness of Chinese families...
...So far no one in authority has complained or suggested I cool it or told me to leave the country...
...My students are all rather silent in class...
...It's part of a teacher's task to provoke students into thought...
...Since this occasioned some surprise, I explained that while communism professed noble enough aims (the improvement of the people, especially the poor), it actually produced greater poverty by means of brutal tyranny...
...I make no attempt to be cautious in what I say about communism, Marxism, or Chairman Mao...
...Surprisingly, a form of Marxism is still a powerful influence here...
...Of course, the kids are grateful to their parents and feel duty bound to them...
...But it probably also has something to do with speaking with a foreigner, especially an American...
...That Mao was at least by one measure three times worse than Stalin (Stalin killed 20 million of his own people while Mao killed 60 million) and six times worse than Hitler (who killed 10 million) does not seem to matter...
...As for the concrete affairs, I can't explain them clearly...
...When they get a chance to speak reasonably freely, they show themselves to be very bright and amusing kids...
...Among those students whose English is quite good, I think this diffidence has something to do with speaking one's mind in a country where people are understandably fearful of government surveillance and retribution...
...Maybe the kids don't care about Marxism anymore or they've forgotten it or they don't trust me and just let me blabber on...
...I imagine my students put up with this as the price to be paid to have free teaching (the U.S...
...A typical feeling about the attacks of September 11, for instance-apart from shock and sympathy, of course- was that America somehow brought them on itself by its bullying approach to international questions...
...In answer to a question about the Vietnam War, I remarked that it was in general a good thing to oppose communism and stop its spread...
...government pays for Fulbright lecturers...
...America runs the UN according to its own interest...
...But I'm sure that you have not known China well, for example, Taiwan affairs and Tibet problems...
...Sometimes my students suggest as much...
...One has to think otherwise just to preserve a bit of sanity...
...Whatever the reason, they only talk when one-on-one in my office or after class over coffee...
...America wants to keep China weak and dependent" (code for American military support for Taiwan...
...When I ask if they would be willing to accept the results of a referendum in either place, they are not at all keen to say yes...
...I did not press him...
...It is taught in the high schools and universities and attendance at a certain number of classes in Marxist theory is compulsory...
...After all, Mao did preside over China's restoration to national independence and international prominence...
...How could China invade what is, after all, its own territory...
...Because China is just like an old grandmother who have experienced much, and America is just like a young gal who is very beautiful but can't understand the full wrinkles and scars on the face of an old woman...
...My translator was again surprised (though he did translate this time) when in answer to a question about Taiwan, I said that if China tried to invade, any American president who refused to defend Taiwan would face the wrath of the American people...
...Those who lived through that period are the most defensive, but I'm puzzled about why younger Chinese often share this view...
...But it is taught mainly through textbooks, not from Marx's work itself...
...But the worst gasps, unmixed by any amusement, are reserved for any Chinese who agrees with me or voices the same opinion-which has, surprisingly, happened on more than one occasion...
...China does not have much of a welfare system and the old Communist system, where one's factory provided housing, medical care, and retirement, has long since gone...
...Perhaps I do not know China well...
...After all, he has to live here...
...Recently, I was giving an invited lecture on war and terrorism at another university in Beijing...
...I think the same patriotism is behind the generally favorable opinion that most people have of Chairman Mao...
...Here is what one of them wrote (English uncorrected): It's more difficult to understand China by American than to understand America by Chinese...
...Chinese students expect me to be biased against China...
...I suspect that patriotism is also a factor...
...The difficulty is we (not only you) can't separate the Chinese government with China and Chinese people...
...After all, the tyrant tormented China for some thirty years, and to think there was nothing good in what he did, that nothing at all about his rule redeems it from being murderous insanity, that those thirty years were a complete waste, is just too much to bear...
...Consequently, what students know about Marxism is quite limited...
...Was there really something good about Mao's rule...
...The parents of some of my students have sacrificed to enable their children to go to a good university and the kids are expected to repay the kindness by raising the family's status and economic standing...
...My guess is that students just repeat the party line, which no one has ever seriously challenged before in their hearing...
...I can go when I please...
...Family pressures can force students to forgo further study, either in China or abroad...
...I suppose that says something too-about both China and my students.nd my students...
...I hastily added that I was speaking from the American perspective and went on to explain the special relationship that has long existed between the United States and the one part of China that did not succumb to communism...
...and so on...
...Beyond the rather crude nationalism, I think there is a certain defensiveness behind the respect people show for Mao...
...When the subject has come up in class, I'm the one who introduces all the relevant concepts: labor theory of value, class struggle, proletariat, etc...
...America is always using force to settle problems...
...All of my students were born after Mao died...
...the host university just provides accommodation...
...I attribute this mostly to difficulty in understanding English or diffidence with respect to speaking English...
...My translator thought this too controversial and declined to translate (though some in the audience knew enough English to have caught on...
...The surprise for my translator was the word "invade...
...Occasionally I try to get them to speak about life in China, but they are reluctant to do so...
...Whenever I challenge students to explain why Tibet or Taiwan should belong to China, or what is so important about such supposed issues of "territorial integrity," they respond with distorted history (Tibet has always been part of China and ruled by China) or tu quoque arguments (What would you do if Georgia broke away from the United States...
...But I make no apology for being controversial...
...The Chinese, whether students, faculty, or others, tend to have a pretty jaundiced attitude toward American foreign policy...
...So if your kids don't help you out, who will...

Vol. 129 • April 2002 • No. 7


 
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