cover of episode My China Journey - with Fox Butterfield

My China Journey - with Fox Butterfield

2024/10/29
logo of podcast Peking Hotel with Liu He

Peking Hotel with Liu He

People
L
Leo
Topics
Leo介绍了福克斯·巴特菲尔德的背景和成就,以及本次访谈的主题和意义。他强调了巴特菲尔德作为第一位驻北京的《纽约时报》记者的独特视角,以及他在冷战时期和中国改革开放初期对中国报道的贡献。访谈涵盖了巴特菲尔德的个人经历、对中国政治和社会变迁的观察,以及他对中美关系的看法。 Fox Butterfield讲述了他与中国交往的个人经历,从最初在香港报道中国,到1979年随美国参议院外交关系委员会访华,以及之后在北京建立《纽约时报》北京分社的经历。他分享了与乔·拜登和约翰·麦凯恩的趣事,以及他如何设法接触到普通中国民众,了解他们的真实生活和想法。他还谈到了他对邓小平、赵紫阳等中国领导人的印象,以及他对中国政治和社会变革的观察。他详细描述了他在中国的工作和生活,包括如何克服语言障碍、与编辑沟通、以及如何应对来自中国政府的监控。他分析了美国公众对中国的态度变化,以及中美两国之间的文化差异。 访谈中,Leo引导Fox Butterfield回顾了他从哈佛大学学习中国历史,到成为《纽约时报》驻北京记者的职业生涯。他详细讲述了他在中国的工作和生活,包括与中国官员和普通民众的互动,以及他对中国社会和政治变革的观察。他分享了他对中国领导人的印象,以及他对中美关系的看法。他还谈到了他写作《苦海余生》的经历,以及这本书对理解中国的重要性。

Deep Dive

Shownotes Transcript

Fox Butterfield is a Pulitzer-winning journalist who has served in Saigon, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Beijing, Boston, Washington and New York City. He was the first China correspondent of the New York Times since 1949 and opened the Beijing Bureau of the Times in 1979, just after diplomatic relations between China and the US normalised. His journalistic book on China, Alive In The Bitter Sea,) became a best-seller and phenomenon in the early 80s, launching the genre of journalist books on contemporary China that generations of journalists soon followed.

I sat down with Fox in late July at his Portland home to record his personal oral history, and take us back to those magical years when China first began to open up in the 70s and early 80s. Fox has the unique vantage point as an Asia correspondent in the Cold War and one of the first American journalists to report in China. His narrative threads together a multifaceted story of a China specialist, informed and enriched by the Cold War context, a Harvard education, journalistic experience in America and Vietnam War, and a life-long interest in China. I walked away from the conversation feeling entertained by Fox’s quirky tales and grounded in the gravitas of the historical context. I hope you will find it interesting too.

This is an episode co-produced with China Books Review), a digital magazine publishing intelligent commentary on all things China and bookish. This issue stitches together two episodes of Fox Butterfield’s oral history most relevant to China, and provides a one-episode overview of his China journey. You may safely skip this one if you have already listened to our previous two pieces

Special thanks to Aorui Pi who edited this audio piece.

About us

Peking Hotel is a bilingual online publication that takes you down memory lane of recent history in China and narrates China’s reality through the personal tales of China experts. Through biweekly podcasts and newsletters, we present colourful first-person accounts of seasoned China experts. The project grew out of Leo’s research at Hoover Institution, where he collects oral histories of prominent China watchers in the West.

Lastly…

Speaking to these thoughtful individuals and sharing their stories with you has been a privilege. Their stories often remind me of what China used to be and what it is capable of becoming. I hope to publish more conversations like this one, so stay tuned!

Please follow our Peking Hotel Substack page) for more.

We also have a Chinese-language Substack).

If you are on Instagram, follow us @peking.hotel). Get full access to Peking Hotel at pekinghotel.substack.com/subscribe)