Épisodes

  • Inside Xi Jinping’s Military Crackdown
    Feb 5 2026

    China’s top generals are falling like flies, and at unprecedented speeds. As Xi Jinping dismantles the upper ranks of the People’s Liberation Army, questions are mounting about corruption, loyalty, and the stability of China’s political system.
    Neil Thomas, an expert on Chinese politics at Asia Society, unpacks the logic of Xi’s military crackdown.

    Neil's articles: https://asiasociety.org/policy-institute/neil-thomas

    Follow him on X: https://x.com/neilthomas123?lang=en

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    41 min
  • Drum Diplomacy: As Trump Sows Chaos Abroad, South Korea and Japan Edge Closer
    Jan 28 2026

    As Trump threatens the sovereignty of NATO allies, the leaders of South Korea and Japan appeared together in Nara, playing drums in a highly choreographed display of diplomatic comity. Ian and Chang talk about the historic significance of this unlikely rapprochement, why it is happening now, and the prospect of an East Asian security architecture without the help of the United States.

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    36 min
  • The American Dream Is Fading. What Comes Next For China's Youths?
    Jan 20 2026

    Across the world, the promise of stable growth that underwrote many economies is unraveling. From Nepal to Bulgaria to Mexico, young people fed up with the status quo are rebelling. While many have turned to populists for help, China's youth are turning to a very different figure. The anthropologist Xiang Biao, who has become a voice for China's "lost" generation in recent years, speak to us about what went wrong with Chinese and Western elites, and his ideas for redefining politics. This conversation was recorded live in Tokyo.

    Related links:

    Xiang's work on Zhejiang Village migrants: https://www.amazon.com/Transcending-Boundaries-Zhejiangcun-Migrant-Village/dp/9004142010

    Xiang's writings:
    https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-19-4953-1

    https://www.readingthechinadream.com/xiang-biao-excerpts-from-self-as-method.html

    https://www.readingthechinadream.com/xiang-biao-hello-stranger.html

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    1 h et 19 min
  • Taiwan’s Forgotten Role in Japan’s War
    Dec 18 2025

    Lau Kek-huat is a Malaysian-born documentary filmmaker based in Taiwan. His latest film, From Island to Island, won the prestigious Golden Horse Award in 2024. The film examines the role of Taiwanese in Japan’s Pacific War and explores why memories of World War II diverge across the Chinese-speaking world.

    Lau joins us to discuss his latest film and its differing reception across Asia.

    Follow his work, including his film at: https://reurl.cc/6bGRDr

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    56 min
  • Japan’s New Leader Meets China’s Red Line
    Dec 4 2025

    Less than a month into Sanae Takaichi’s tenure as Japan's prime minister, she has already sparked a diplomatic crisis with Japan's powerful neighbor. Joining us is Tokujin Matsudaira, a constitutional-law professor at Kanagawa University who grew up in Taiwan. He has written extensively on Article 9, constitutional revision, and the diplomatic challenges that shape Japan–China relations.

    Related Links:
    https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/takaichi-sanae-iron-lady-will-not-improve-gender-relations-japan-by-ian-buruma-2025-11

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    42 min
  • Anti-Semitism and East Asia
    Nov 26 2025

    In the September 29, 2025, issue of The New Yorker, the writer Ian Buruma reviews two books that trace the uses and abuses of anti-semitism from late-19th century France to present-day US campus politics. Long before right-wing Israeli politicians to evoke the term to deflect criticism of the war in Gaza, anti-semitism reflected a persistent worldview: that a shadowy group of powerful Jews often stood behind the workings of a complicated world.

    For over a century, that idea has found converts in East Asia. In this episode, Ian and I talk about how beliefs about Jewish power manifested in Chinese and Japanese life from the 20th century to the present.

    Related Links:

    "The Uses and Abuses of Anti-Semitism" by Ian Buruma


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    43 min
  • The Forces Shaping Asia's Low Birth Rates
    Nov 12 2025

    China, Japan, and South Korea are each confronting plummeting birthrates and rapidly aging populations, each with worrying consequences for their economies, societies, and political futures.

    What makes East Asia’s demographic decline different from that of the West? As women entered the workforce in Asia, how did they define and discover freedom and fulfillment between the expectations of the family and the workplace? And in China, how has the one- and two-child policies—and the parallel tide of economic reforms—reshaped desires in marriage and child-bearing among young adults?

    Yun Zhou, a social demographer at the University of Michigan with a particular focus on family policy and gender in contemporary China, joins us.

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    48 min
  • The Chinese Immigrants Behind Japan’s Populist Surge
    Oct 29 2025

    Japan's first female prime minister, Takaichi Sanae, a hard-line conservative, rose to power on promises of national renewal and a “Japan First” agenda. Her rise follows the stunning breakthrough of the Sanseito, a Trump-style populist party that captured 14 seats in the upper house this summer, drawing support from disaffected youth and social-media activists.

    Takehiro Masutomo, author of Runri: Tracking the Mass Exodus of Wealthy Chinese to Japan, talks about the Chinese immigrants behind Japan's right-wing turn.

    Maustomo's book is on Amazon (Japanese version only)

    Masutomo's podcast Asia Frontline

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    34 min