China after COVID: UPenn’s Neysun Mahboubi reports on scholarly exchange in a tightening political space

Podcast

Play episode:

This week on Sinica, UPenn legal scholar Neysun Mahboubi talks about his recently-concluded trip back to China โ€” his first time back since the outbreak of the pandemic. Neysun talks about the importance of in-person, face-to-face scholarly exchange, and despite concerns over the more restrictive political space in China, sounds a hopeful note about what the restoration ofย in-person exchange might mean for the future of U.S.-China relations.

05:02 โ€“ Neysun Mahboubiโ€™s YouTube-based initiatives on the U.S.-China relations

10:15 โ€“ The changes in Beijing in recent years

13:49 โ€“ The recently observed growing reticence of Chinese people to speak up, and the third-rail topics

16:50 โ€“ The effect of Chinese administrative handling of the pandemic on peopleโ€™s trust

25:01 โ€“ What is the view of Chinese liberal intellectuals on the role of the U.S. in the worsening U.S.-China relations?

28:29 โ€“ Have the Biden administrationโ€™s recent efforts to thaw the U.S.-China relations been well received by the Chinese side?

32:48 โ€“ The future of scholarly exchanges from China and the U.S. in light of the pandemic and escalating political tensions

40:13 โ€“ The Ukraine War from the perspective of Chinese intellectuals

A complete transcript of this podcast is available at TheChinaProject.com.

Recommendations:

Neysun:ย To Live, directed by Zhang Yimou

Kaiser:ย The Status Kuo, an American politics substack by Jay Kuo

Mentioned:ย 

To Live: A Novelย by Yu Hua (translated by Michael Berry)