After years of neglect, the Forbidden City’s Palace Museum is finally being opened up and dragged into the 21st century
February 1, 1662: Koxinga takes Taiwan
The Execution of Yue Fei: 875 Years of Patriotic Myth
Audio: Translating Passion to Business with Jeremiah Jenne
I joined Josh Summers for an episode of his excellent new podcast The Expat Entrepreneur to discuss the story behind Beijing by Foot and sharing my passion for Chinese history and culture.
When Ulysses S. Grant met General Li
Beijing to Improve Over 900km of Bike Lanes, Expand Urban Rail
While some commuters will no doubt rejoice at the increased number of bike lanes and sidewalks, the true test of the municipal government's commitment to green transportation will come from whether restrictions on automobiles and other motorized vehicles using spaces set aside for cyclists and pedestrians are enforced.
The Party Struggles to Keep Control of its Own History
Why is it called The Forbidden City?
All Good Things Must Come to an End
Donald Trump and Xi Jinping in 2018: Evan Osnos, American Decline, and the Country of Cats
The Question of “Chinese Influence”
Soul Searching
2017 Year in Review: Beijing's Changing Urban Landscape and a Few Predictions for the Coming Year
Dangerous Benevolence
The Woman who Built an Empire
Imperial-Era Tombs Discovered on Site of New Beijing Mega-Airport
Massacre and Memory: 80 Years Later, the Battle over Nanjing Rages On
Postcards From Dashilan: Retracing the Development of Beijing’s Former Commercial Hub
Peter Parker in Canton
The Beijing Migrants Crackdown: A ChinaFile Conversation
Since mid-November, police and security officials have evicted tens of thousands of migrants from their apartments, and pictures of the newly homeless from all across China sitting outside in the Beijing winter have spread widely on social media. Why did the city government take this step? And what does this mean for the rights of China’s so-called “low-end population”?