This is a live recording from the fourth and final session of 'Cosmopolitan Conversations,' a recent symposium held in Shanghai at M on the Bund and sponsored by CET Academic Programs. All four conversations are hosted by UC Irvine Professor of History Jeffrey Wasserstrom, author of the new title China in the 21st Century: What Everyone Needs to Know and the organizing force behind The China Beat, generally considered the best academic group blog on China today.

And the topic under discussion? Nothing other than "Writing China, Blogging China." Sharing the microphone with Jeff is Evan Osnos, who you may know as the staff writer for the New Yorker based in Beijing and occasional guest on the Sinica podcast. In this wide-ranging discussion Evan and Jeff touch on everything from the hyper-productive travails of early journalists in China, to the challenges of keeping up a blog and the oft-exaggerated death of the format. The conversation also covers a host of other hot topics in US-China relations.

This is a lengthy recording clocking in at more than an hour and a half. If you don't plan to spend that time at your computer or want to grab the recording for later use, we encourage you to download this recording as a standalone MP3 file.
 said on
July 30, 2010
another day wasted on these boring academic mumbo-jumbo podcast. the point of that conversation could have been done in 5min.

an extra elementary mandarin learning podcast(or even a review) would have been better appreciated.
 said on
July 30, 2010
@richard,

Thanks for the feedback. We're aiming to produce at least four podcasts and a single HSK test each week right now, but also very happy if we can be of help to the folks and CET and the China Beat. Different strokes for different folks. At least as far as our lessons go, there will be another elementary lesson and then HSK test released this weekend.

If you'd like to only get certain materials on your RSS feed or homepage incidentally, the best thing to do is customize your preferences on the archives page: http://popupchinese.com/archives. Just an FYI in case you don't know.

Thanks,

--david

 said on
August 4, 2010
totally agree with richard

aren't we supposed to be learning chinese on this sight????