As China cracks down on bookstores at home, Chinese-language booksellers
are flourishing overseas
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[November 18, 2024] By
FU TING
WASHINGTON (AP) — Yu Miao smiles as he stands among the 10,000 books
crowded on rows of bamboo shelves in his newly reopened bookstore. It’s
in Washington’s vibrant Dupont Circle neighborhood, far from its last
location in Shanghai, where the Chinese government forced him out of
business six years ago.
“There is no pressure from the authorities here,” said Yu, the owner of
JF Books, Washington’s only Chinese bookseller. “I want to live without
fear.”
Independent bookstores have become a new battleground in China, swept up
in the ruling Communist Party’s crackdown on dissent and free
expression. The Associated Press found that at least a dozen bookstores
in the world’s second-largest economy have been shuttered or targeted
for closure in the last few months alone, squeezing the already tight
space for press freedom. One bookstore owner was arrested over four
months ago.
The crackdown has had a chilling effect on China’s publishing industry.
Bookstores are common in China, but many are state-owned. Independent
bookstores are governed by an intricate set of rules with strict
controls now being more aggressively policed, according to bookstore
owners. Printing shops and street vendors are also facing more rigorous
government inspections by the National Office Against Pornography and
Illegal Publication.
The office did not respond to interview requests from The Associated
Press. China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in a statement to AP, said
it was not aware of a crackdown on bookstores.
Yu isn't alone in taking his business out of the country. Chinese
bookstores have popped up in Japan, France, Netherlands and elsewhere in
the U.S. in recent years, as a result of both stricter controls in China
and growing Chinese communities abroad.
It’s not just the books' contents that are making Chinese authorities
wary. In many communities, bookstores are cultural centers where
critical thinking is encouraged, and conversations can veer into
politics and other topics not welcomed by the authorities.
The bookstore owner who was arrested was Yuan Di, also called Yanyou,
the founder of Jiazazhi, an artistic bookstore in Shanghai and Ningbo on
China’s eastern coast. He was taken away by police in June, according to
Zhou Youlieguo, who closed his own bookstore in Shanghai in September.
Yuan's arrest was also confirmed by two other people who declined to be
named for fear of retribution. The charge against Yuan is unclear.
An official in Ningbo's Bureau of Culture, Radio Television and Tourism,
which oversees bookstores, declined comment, noting the case is under
investigation. The Ningbo police didn’t respond to an interview request.
Michael Berry, director of UCLA's Center for Chinese Studies, said a
sluggish Chinese economy may be driving the government to exert greater
control.
“The government might be feeling that this is a time to be more cautious
and control this kind of discourse in terms of what people are consuming
and reading to try to put a damper on any potential unrest and kind of
nip it in the bud,” Berry said.
These bookstore owners face dual pressures, Berry added. One is the
political clampdown; the other is the global movement, especially among
young people, toward digital media and away from print publications.
Wang Yingxing sold secondhand books in Ningbo for almost two decades
before being ordered to close in August. Local officials informed Wang
he lacked a publication business license even though he wasn’t eligible
to obtain one as a second-hand seller.
Faded outlines marked the spot where a sign for Fatty Wang’s Bookstore
once hung. Spray-painted black letters on the bookstore’s window read:
“Temporarily closed”.
“We’re promoting culture, I’m not doing anything wrong, right? I’m just
selling some books and promoting culture,” Wang said, tying a bundle of
books together with brown wrapper and white nylon string.
“Then why won’t you leave me alone?” Wang added.
Half a dozen other people heaved boxes of books into the back of a van.
The books, Wang said, were being sold to cafe and bar owners who wanted
to burnish little libraries for their patrons. Some would be sent to a
warehouse in Anhui. The rest, he said, were to be sent to a recycling
station to be pulped and destroyed.
Bookstores are not the only target. Central authorities have also
cracked down on other places such as printing shops, internet bars,
gaming rooms and street vendors. Strict inspections have taken place all
over the country, according to Chinese authorities.
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Yu Miao, owner of JF Books, poses for a photograph in his bookstore
in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
Authorities in Shanghai inspected
printing places and bookstores, looking for “printing, copying or
selling illegal publications,” according to a government document.
This shows the authorities are not just barring the sale of some
publications, but tracing them back to the printing process. They
found some printing stores did not “register the copy content as
required” and demanded they fix the problem quickly.
In Shaoyang, a city in China’s south, authorities said they will be
“cracking down on harmful publications in accordance with the law.”
The Communist Party has various powers to control which books are
available. Any publication without a China Standard Book Number is
considered illegal, including self-published books and those
imported without special licenses. Books can be banned even after
they are published if restrictions are later tightened — often for
unclear reasons — or if the writers say something upsetting to the
Chinese authorities.
Yet despite these restrictions and the crackdown on existing
booksellers, more bookstores are opening. Recent figures are
unavailable, but a survey by Bookdao, a media company that focuses
on the book industry, shows more than twice as many bookstores
opened than closed in China in 2020.
Liu Suli, who has been running All Sages Books in Beijing for over
three decades, says there are many idealists in the industry.
“Everyone who reads has a dream of having a bookstore,” Liu says,
despite the challenges.
In many cases, those dreams are being fulfilled outside China. Yu
and other Chinese booksellers around the world stock their shelves
with books from Hong Kong, Taiwan and mainland China, as well as
books published locally.
Zhang Jieping, founder of Nowhere, a bookstore in Taiwan and
Thailand, said there's a growing demand for books from migrants who
left China after the COVID-19 pandemic.
“They don’t just want to speak fluent English or Japanese to fit in,
they want cultural autonomy,” Zhang said. “They want more community
spaces. Not necessarily a bookstore, but in any format — a gallery,
or a restaurant.”
Li Yijia is a 22-year-old student who arrived in Washington from
Beijing in August. One Sunday morning, she wandered through JF Books
where she found titles in Chinese and English. She said a Chinese
bookstore feels like “another world in a bubble” which helps her
critical thinking by allowing her to read books in both languages.
“It also relieves homesickness, like a Chinese restaurant,” Li
added.
The closure of the bookstores leads the owners to different paths.
Some ended up in jail, some went looking for jobs to feed their
families. Some started a journey to leave censorship behind.
Since he closed his Shanghai bookstore, Zhou, 39, has moved to Los
Angeles, but hasn't decided what his next step will be.
He said his fully licensed independent bookstore, which sold art
books and self-published works by artists and translators, was fined
thousands of dollars and he was interrogated over a dozen times
during the past four years. He's seen colleagues jailed for selling
“illegal publications.” All the self-published book artists and
editors he worked with asked him to take down their work after
warnings by local authorities.
Zhou said he could not handle further harassment He said it was as
if he were “smuggling drugs instead of selling books.”
The existence of his bookstore, Zhou said, was “a rebellion and a
resistance,” which is not there anymore. ___
Associated Press writer Dake Kang in Ningbo, China, contributed to
this report.
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