Wednesday, July 04, 2007

 

Final exam results

Executive summary
Pass
Details
八十九 %, if I understand the results page correctly.
:-)

Sunday, April 29, 2007

 

Final test

Last exams for the module were this week. My conversation partner and I conversed haltingly in Mandarin for about 7 minutes; this was recorded for marking.
Then about 20 minutes of the teacher saying stuff in mandarain and us guessing what she said.
Not too bad and all done now.
I'm reasonably confident that I've passed these fairly artificial tests, but I can't figure out why my partner can understand me but the flunet Chinese speakers in Beijing pretended not to...

Monday, April 16, 2007

 

Penultimate exam session

After the real world assessment in Beijing (result - failed miserably, I think) back to school.
I managed to fit in 2 or 3 hours of revision for the reading and writing exams, hampered only by my innate laziness and the warm weather.

The exam itself was technically a much better exam with a wider range of difficulty and it took pretty much the full 45 minutes before I ran out of answers/guesses.

Next week the final two exams - listening and speaking. It's a good job our teacher speaks muuuuch sloooower than the people do in Beijing otherwise none of us would stand a chance.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

 

When is China?

China is, of course, a contradiction. Western commentators say that it will be the dominant (economic) force in a few decades' time; I think they are right, but I'm not sure that ordinary Chinese either believe that, or believe that it will do the common people any good.

Currently (and bear in mind that I only visited Beijing and a little outside), it feels very much like the mixture you'd expect in a vast, (formerly?) totalitarian and insular, largely rural-agricultural state rushing forward into today and tomorrow. Some modern stuff (but not much ultra-modern apart from some architecture), slums (a lot being demolished), pollution, the occasional horse, lots and lots of manual workers (cleaning streets, digging holes by hand etc), lots of fresh produce sold by individuals and one-person service points (knife sharpening, bike fixing etc), high mobile phone onwership, clear generational differences (although with strong family ties).

It feels like a cross between Britain at the start of the Industrial Revolution and the Britain of the 1950s.

 

More miscellany


 

Blog readers' whereabouts

I suppose I didn't think about what to expect in terms of readership. I only set up the blog to avoid a) having to send multiple emails and b) choosing what to email to whom. So I told a few people who I thought might be interested and they can choose whether or not to read. Almost all of those based in Sheffield or at least UK.
Not quite sure how people come across blogs or choose to dip in, but above is what Blogger reports as the distribution of readers. Some people in China managed to read it, although I found that difficult at times; sadly no-on in Africa (the pin on the left of Africa is Tenerife), Australia or Russia was interested...

Thursday, April 05, 2007

 

Blogging

I've not written a personal blog before and I've found it a very interesting experience.
As I've already said, it makes me reflect more on my experiences.
I think a lot of (most/all?) bloggers must be extroverts, because it also feels quite exposed for someone like me who is personally shy and introvert.

 

The journey home

By car from Yang's apartment. Passed an amusement park which appeared to be open before 8am - strange.
At the airport, it's an almost unintelligible lengthy 6 stage process to exit the country, involving filling in a number of forms.
While waiting for my flight I found a deserted area with wonderfully comfortable loungers - heaven!
Prices at the airport are suddenly Western - about £1 for a small bottle of water, as opposed to 6p in BJ. It's a little culture shock.
On the plane I watched 3 movies and was still well to the east of Moscow. (Two made me cry, but I cry easily. At least I didn't cry during the thriller.) Which reminds me - on the way to China I watched Casino Royale; doesn't Daniel Craig remind you of Pete Middleton (obviously a bit the worse for wear, but he has worked at SHU for a while now)? Or is it Gary Lineker?
By the second meal, I switched back to western cutlery. I hadn't used a knife and fork for all the time I was in China and I literally had difficulty knowing what to do with them. (I also find I have difficulty writing English, not that I'd been writing much Chinese.)
The plane was late into Paris and I just missed my connection there, so another 3 hour stopover in Gucci and Rolex land.
"<"Rant>
Air travel isn't any joy is it?
It takes for ever and is very uncomfortable; even in Business Class (which I wasn't), it's hours and hours sitting in a chair less comfortable than your own at home, watching videos and eating food which isn't as good as your own cooking. In cattle class it's a quite uncomfortable chair - like the ones in 6715 - for 10 hours...
"<"/Rant>
Sue picked me up at Manchester (thankyou, thankyou!) and I eventually got into a bed 24 sleepfree hours after I'd got out of one in Beijing.
It's nice to be home.
:-)

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

 

The last post...

..from China at least.
I've had a wonderful final day. Couldn't find a kebab seller on the street so went to a back alley restaurant where there was no common spoken or written langauge to go on. Excellent food though.
Then I played table-tennis for a couple of hours in the sunshine (and wind).
A lovely finish to a great holiday/ethnographic research project.
See you all in the UK.
D
PS I'll put up some more pics when I'm back.

 

Toilets

Public toliets are evry half mile or so in the main areas for the use of the general public; and the same in the hutongs (back alleys, communal courtyard housing) - for the locals.
They are generally clean but almost all are the squat type, apart from urinals obviously.
I've glad I got the point and shoot mechanism installed at the factory.

 

Miscellany


 

Last day :-(

While you're still abed (it's about 4:30am UK time, 12:30pm here as I type), I'm enjoying my last day here. It's a beautiful warm sunny day. I'm off to find some warmed up meat-on-stick for lunch and see if I can persaude any more locals to play me at table tennis.

Tomorrow morning I leave Beijing :-(
Tomorrow evening I'll be home :-)

 

Up to the highest heights...

I went to the telecomms towers, 400m high, and up to the viewing platform at 225m. Stunning views on a glorious day here.
I didn't feel any vertigo, strangely. I've had vertigo since a sudden onset about 20 years ago and my knees go weak in simulations even.
And I enjoyed cycling back into town on my well-oiled machine.

 

Breakdown

See pictures of my (t)rusty steed at http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/obscuredavid/DavidGoesToChina

I cycled off this morning and after about an hour my steed ground to a halt. The chain had fallen apart. Fortunately this being BeiJing I was about 50 yards from a roadside bike fixer.
The chain is all encased. He took it all apart, fitted a new link oiled and re-assembled for 20p.

Far fewer graunching noises now.

Monday, April 02, 2007

 

Lazy day

A sunny, windy day.
Today I cycled around the hutongs looking unsuccessfully for the entrance to BJ's underground nuclear bunker built in the free-love days of the 60's when Russia was threatening.
There are no maps at all of the hutongs, so it's a bit tricky.

Then I went to an Indian restuarant for lunch. I have a habit of trying foreign-foreign food wherever I go to see what it's like. I had a papadom (oily, covered with chopped onion and tomato), rogan josh (defintiely lamb - a good sign - slightly tinny tomatoey sauce with heavy ginger overtones. No onion, fresh tomato or other macro-ingredients) and a nan (very good). Along with a couple of Chinese beers - like a light lager. A fiver, which was quite expensive for a fairly posh place down a back alley.

In the afternoon, to a tea-house which served pots of tea and a designed-for-tourists shadow play.

 

Tea

Isn't drunk as much as you might think, and little ceremony at home.
Each person has an individual cup with a lid. A batch of leaves go in and hot water from falsk. The tea is then drunk over a long period of time, topped up with water over a day or more before fresh leaves.
On the street, a lot of tea-houses and tea-shops simply sell leaf tea - don't go expecting a warm drink.

 

I would like to say...

...but I can't.
It's difficult for me as someone who lives by talking and occasionally writing, persuading people with subtleties, not to be able to use much lanaguage at all, let alone subtlety.
My 150 words are not enough, and my pronunciation is apparently largely unintelligible.
This is part of my "out of comfort zone" experience.
Maybe writing this is a partial substitute.
But I may have to have a long chat with each reader indivually when I get back, to make up...

 

Comfort zone

One of the points of a trip like this is to move outside my comfort zone, to have some of my views challenged and changed. For me this is usually a slow process, not a Damascene flash. I'll assimilate what I've experienced slowly over the next months.
One thing I've noticed is that I'm tolerant of the taste (decor, clothing, habits) of my hosts (defintiely not to my taste) , and much less tolerant in UK, even though people are clearly living out their version of their cultural identity just as truly, based on class, ethnicity, education, wealth etc.

 

Language

I spent an hour with Yang this evening talking about language. We both learnt something, I'm just not quite sure what yet.

He told me that to Chinese people who don't speak English, all European langauges sound alike.

 

Menu

This evening's menu.
All food is eaten at the same time. Chopsticks are used to take food directly from serving dishes to the mouth. Bones are discarded directly on to the table.

 

More on cycling

It's difficult to convey adequately the scale of cycling here. There are probably more bikes than cars on the road, and there are a *lot* of cars.
About 15% of the bike are electric assisted, very few perol/moped/motorbikes.
At busy time s(ie most of the time) a bike is about as fast as a car (same as back home, really).
Theoretically in the centre, you need to aprk your bike in an authorise, supervised bike park and pay 2p for the privilege. In practice people park anywhere.
There are a lot of 3-wheelers with 3ftx4ft carry spaces behind them. They can carry beds, scaffolding, 3 or 4 people, 15ft lengths of steel piping, 6x4 sheet of glass, caged birds...
On ordinary bikes, I've seen 40 boxes of shoes, two bulging sacks of cabbages, all kinds of stuff.
BJers' are very accurate slow, close-formation cyclists and they need to be packed like a pelton of sardines with inefficient brakes (if any).
Overall BJ is OK to cycle in, even for a beginner, as long as you stick with the pack.

There is a Confucian element to the way the locals obey the lights and trafficpolicers, but it's overlaid with a more Taoist "go with the flow" where necessary.
(No Bhuddist overtones unless that's the nature of the innumerable ring roads.)

 

Frankie says...

I've realised that I've now done all the things I *really* wanted to do in China -

*Now* I can relax.

And today I did - I got no deeds to do, no promises to keep...

Aren't holidays great?


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