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Let Only Red Flowers Bloom: Identity and Belonging in Xi Jinping's China

Let Only Red Flowers Bloom: Identity and Belonging in Xi Jinping's China

by Emily Feng

Crown ·2025 ·304 pages
New Release
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Top of the Pile
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82/99
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95/99

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70/99

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About This Book

A deeply reported investigation into the battle over identity in China, chronicling the state oppression of those who fail to conform to Xi Jinping's definition of who is "Chinese," from an award-winning NPR correspondent.In the hot summer months of 2021, China celebrated the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party. Authorities held propaganda and education campaigns across the country defining the ideal Chinese ethnically Han Chinese, Mandarin speaking, solidly atheist, and devoted to the socialist project of strengthening China against western powers. No one can understand modern China—including its response to the pandemic—without understanding who actually lives there, and the ways that the Chinese State tries to control its people. Let Only Red Flowers Bloom collects the stories of more than two dozen people who together represent a more holistic picture of Chinese identity. The Uyghurs who have seen millions of their fellow citizens detained in camps; mainland human rights lawyer Ren Quanniu, who lost his law license in a bureaucratic dispute after representing a Hong Kong activist; a teacher from Inner Mongolia, forced to escape persecution because of his support of his mother tongue. These are just a few narratives that journalist Emily Feng reports on, revealing human stories about resistance against a hegemonic state and introducing readers to the people who know about Chinese identity the best. Illuminating a country that has for too long been secretive of the real lives its citizens are living, Feng reveals what it's really like to be anything other than party-supporting Han Chinese in China, and the myriad ways they're trying to survive in the face of an oppressive regime.


Reviews

"An important work of reporting that need boast no further virtues to merit readers' attention, but it has the additional benefit of revealing what the inhabitants of a country on the cusp of authoritarianism—a country like our own—may be in for ..."

Becca Rothfeld· The Washington Post Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Both a swansong for a vanishing world, and a moving account of the pressures and persecutions faced by those whom Xi has identified as threats to his unitary vision for China ..."

Julia Lovell· Financial Times Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Essential reading for anyone interested in geopolitics—or the world of the near future ..."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Journalistic accounts of contemporary China often focus on dissidents—those who deliberately oppose and provoke the party-state—leading to an overrepresentation of such figures in the minds of foreign readers."

Maura Elizabeth Cunningham· The Wall Street Journal Read review ↗ Near the Top

"The book's final chapters—covering Hong Kong, Taiwan, and the Chinese diaspora—are engagingly written and effectively encapsulate the messiness of Chinese identity politics in the peripheries of the People's Republic ..."

Jessie Lau· Los Angeles Review of Books Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Concise yet replete with empathy, insight, context and narrative momentum."

Alden Mudge· BookPage Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

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