Expressed desire to publish PNM exactly as is, with no cuts.
Assuming this actually happens, I am spared the compromise.
Obvious next question is, who is this mysterious China mainland publishing house?
« Good move by Pope | Main | A dream of the dream ticket? »
Expressed desire to publish PNM exactly as is, with no cuts.
Assuming this actually happens, I am spared the compromise.
Obvious next question is, who is this mysterious China mainland publishing house?



This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on November 29, 2006 7:15 PM.
The previous post in this blog was Good move by Pope.
The next post in this blog is A dream of the dream ticket?.
Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.
Comments (3)
The other question is "Do different areas, provinces, etc. in China have different censorship rules?" I thought that censorship was centrally controlled.
Posted by Steve Skalski | November 29, 2006 7:59 PM
To me, the key thing with this development is that there is a faction of thinkers within the elite that want PNM published to move certain debates along. This is an old Chinese method of using outsiders to push insiders' debates.
Apparently, the publisher selected by my allies in this effort is one that plays such a provocative role with a confidence that Peking U Press simply wasn't up for.
Posted by Tom Barnett | November 29, 2006 9:38 PM
Great news, we need more like-minded people in China. By ancient ttadition, the Chinese people are not a naturally-expanding Imperial society, yet they value stability and expanding foreign commercial contacts; an excellent partner to the US to support and share the burden of SysAdmin in the Gap....both in military roles and as civilians business and NGO contacts.
Posted by Ted B. (Charging Rhino) | November 30, 2006 1:04 PM