
The Life and Times of Xi Zhongxun

“Guessing about whether Jinping cares more about ‘ideology/security’ or ‘development’ is a distraction from the basic point that the Party has always cared about both, even though the pursuit of two such goals simultaneously inevitably creates tensions” (p. 543).
Jonathon P Sine • The Life and Times of Xi Zhongxun
The much-touted “institutionalization” of Chinese politics under Deng Xiaoping is revealed as largely illusory. Torigian’s detailed reconstruction of events surrounding Deng’s autocratic and often arbitrary purges—of Hua Guofeng, Hu Yaobang, Zhao Ziyang (and, as an aside, nearly Jiang Zemin)—paints a far less orderly picture. Deng emerges, in the w... See more
Jonathon P Sine • The Life and Times of Xi Zhongxun
Elite politics in China
how easily one can misplay their hand in the murky world of Leninist power politics—a setting in which prestige, manipulation, and coercion prevail. The intentionally hierarchical design of these regimes makes them especially leader-friendly: the top leader reliably stands above the rules and norms, able to reshape them at will. As a result, instit... See more
Jonathon P Sine • The Life and Times of Xi Zhongxun
One of the central lessons of The Party’s Interests Come First is that the familiar labels used in China-watching—reformer versus conservative, or more morally charged binaries like good versus bad—often collapse under scrutiny. Torigian dismantles these categories, showing how supposed heroes were less heroic than assumed, and villains less villai... See more
Jonathon P Sine • The Life and Times of Xi Zhongxun
Images of death and suffering have burst on to our social media feeds in the 21st century. For most of us they disappear as quickly as they arrive, a flash on the screen sent away by the next swipe of the finger. Inhabiting the mindscape of Xi Zhongxun is hard, perhaps impossible for most of us—it would require experiencing things we never have, li... See more
The Life and Times of Xi Zhongxun
On the formative years of Xi Zhongxun, father of XI Jingping
History is like a map, it marks the mountains and deserts, but one can’t experience them