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No Enemies, No Hatred: Selected Essays and Poems Hardcover – 3 Jan 2012


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Review

Though he is an equal in many respects to V?clav Havel, who contributed a foreword to this volume, Liu is not as literary a figure. Instead, his voice is humble and inelegant, if vigorous. Liu's style reflects his enthusiastic adoption of the Internet, and his strong identification with netizens everywhere. His writing would be simply informative if his subjects were not so urgent, and the clarity of his moral stance not so gem-hard, crystal-clear, and necessary.--Michael Autrey"Booklist" (12/15/2011)

It is scarcely credible that the government of a country of 1.4 billion people, one of the largest economies, an emergent great power that is flexing its muscle in all directions, can be so scared of one individual, a writer whose crime is to write about what is happening in China and to disseminate his ideas online. What has [Liu] done that is so bad? Only by reading his work can we find out. Liu's colleagues outside China, Perry Link and Tienchi Martin-Liao, and Liu Xia, are to be thanked for a timely compilation in English that introduces the man and his thoughts from his early years as a literary critic at a Beijing university to his status as the new century's most famous Chinese intellectual, even while he is silenced and incarcerated in his country. It's gutsy for Harvard University Press to publish it, too. Harvard has interests in China, as do many institutions these days. Just to mention Liu Xiaobo's name is taboo for Chinese academics, and even academics outside China can be wary of discussing his work in case they offend officialdom. "No Enemies, No Hatred" lets us judge for ourselves. It covers a range of recent hot topics in China: the role of sex and political humor in contemporary culture, the Confucius revival, the Beijing Olympics, Hong Kong, Tibet, Obama, Jesus Christ. There's commentary on abuses that attracted grassroots protest: farmers evicted from their land, children forced into slave labor, violent crimes unpunished and covered up.--Nicholas Jose"The Australian" (10/05/2011)

This is a book everyone should read, as Australian citizens and as human beings, because our national stake in what happens in China has become enormous and our human engagement with it must take the side of those who, like Liu, have the greatest integrity and the most generous vision of their country's future. Whether from a scenario planning or moral point of view, this man's ideas need to be a key part of how we see China...It's a brilliant collection and belongs in the great tradition going back to "The Apology of Socrates" and "The Consolation of Philosophy".--Paul Monk"Sydney Morning Herald" (12/23/2011)

Bookshops are now submerged by a tidal wave of new publications attempting to provide information about China, and yet there is (it seems to me) one new book whose reading should be of urgent and essential importance, both for the specialist and for the general reader alike--the new collection of essays by Liu Xiaobo, judiciously selected, translated, and presented by very competent scholars, whose work greatly benefited from their personal acquaintance with the author.--Simon Leys"New York Review of Books" (02/09/2012)

In "No Enemies, No Hatred: Selected Essays and Poems", the well-translated collection edited by Perry Link, Tienchi Martin-Liao and Liu Xia--Liu's wife--Liu demonstrates a considerable amount of anger while retaining his Gandhian nonviolent spirit. Taken together, his essays offer the best analysis I have read of what's wrong in the People's Republic of China.--Jonathan Mirsky"New York Times Book Review" (01/01/2012)

"No Enemies, No Hatred" [is] a collection that shows why the Communist Party fears this 56-year-old intellectual-turned-activist and his ideas. In essays on China's rise, Tibet, the impact of materialism and nationalism on morality and sex, the 2008 Olympics, and much more, Liu advances the antithesis to the Party line, writing "free from fear," as co-editor Perry Link puts it in his valuable introduction...Liu's writing is most personal when writing about Tiananmen, but all of the essays display a distinctly humane spirit. He takes evident pride in the changes that ordinary Chinese have brought about despite the Communist Party's tight grip on power...Liu has a keen eye for the cynicism and hypocrisy that warps Chinese society, fed by propaganda extolling wealth, power and national pride.--Ellen Bork"Wall Street Journal" (12/30/2011)

"No Enemies, No Hatred" is the first English-language collection of Liu's poems and essays, including works that the Chinese government cited when convicting him in 2009. Editors' notes included in the book do an excellent job of providing foreign readers with background on some of the topics that Liu writes about...This collection begins with Liu's writings about [the Tiananmen Square] protests, including poignant poems about those who died. Elsewhere, he takes aim at both Chinese and Westerners who believe that the other's culture holds all the answers to humanity's problems...Liu's sentence ends in June 2020. It's unknown how much China's political system will have changed by then. But one thing seems certain: If the injustices that Liu has railed against are still in place, he will not be timid about speaking his mind.--Mike Revzin"Christian Science Monitor" (01/03/2012)

Although the Nobel Peace Prize recipient Liu has been unable to publish anything since his most recent detention, which began in late 2008, Link, his co-editors, and a superb group of translators have assembled an impressive sampling of Liu's courageous and insightful writings from the past two decades in this remarkable, highly readable new book. Liu's critical essays and moving prison poetry combine to form a fascinating portrait of China during a period of rapid development and political change. If there was ever any doubt that Liu deserved the Peace Prize, this book erases it...Neither China specialists nor newcomers will soon forget this powerful book.--Jerome A. Cohen"Foreign Affairs" (01/01/2012)

Offers a glimpse into the coruscating mind of one of China's greatest dissident thinkers...Chinese officials regularly describe Liu as a dangerous criminal who threatens the very foundations of the state. The conclusion many readers of this powerful and fascinating collection of Liu's writings will reach is that those foundations are not as strong as the Chinese government likes to portray to the outside world...Even for those unfamiliar with Chinese politics or the country's human rights record, this book should appeal because of the moving poetry and beautifully written essays...The best chance yet for those who cannot read Chinese to hear the voice of China's conscience.--Jamil Anderlini"Financial Times" (01/27/2012)

No Enemies, No Hatred marks the inaugural English-language collection of Liu's work...[It] demonstrates the breadth--and intellectual and emotional potency--of a powerful writer and political advocate...[No Enemies, No Hatred] is a wonderful introduction to Liu's work. Liu writes with ease and persuasiveness on subjects ranging from land grabs of farmland by corrupt officials, to child slavery, to Confucius. He has a knack for nailing contemporary China.--Emily-Anne Owen"The Independent" (04/13/2012)

A fascinating...compendium and an important read for anyone interested in the Quaker injunction to "speak truth to power." Liu is virtually a paragon of that injunction, and of the words of the Gospel according to John: "You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free." In No Enemies, he rebukes his fellow Chinese elites who "have yet to learn how to draw spiritual meaning from our encounters with suffering, how to live in human dignity, or how to feel concern for the suffering of actual, ordinary people." He not only criticizes the politically privileged he sees as stifling human growth and expression, he also admonishes his fellow Chinese who know the truth, but are too easily intimidated to attempt unmasking and opposing it. But Liu saves his most incisive analysis for the Chinese government, tracking its legacy of nationalism from ancient times through Mao and beyond, as well as its perennial campaign to muzzle dissent and clamp down popular unrest...Liu's essays are efforts to persuade his readers to recognize that the world is moving in the direction of freedom and democracy, and to encourage us to do what we can to help achieve change... No Enemies, No Hatred is a virtual ethnography of China's political and economic corruption and what he calls an "atrophied sense of justice.."..In bringing the plight of his people to the world, and being suitably honored for it with the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize, Liu Xiaobo positions himself as a teacher and an advocate in a freedom, democracy, and justice movement that does seem to be growing around the world...No Enemies, No Hatred is strong in many ways and a bit lacking in others, which puts it in league with most other great books on such loaded topics as freedom and totalitarianism. Liu does belong in that pantheon, and I am delighted to find him firmly placed there.--Gordon Fellman"Los Angeles Review of Books" (03/09/2012)

This book surprised me with its bold and outspoken perspective of modern China, seen from inside by a passionate advocate for individual rights in the world's largest-ever mass state. The terms of reference offer reflections on our own society as well as on China's.--Richard Thwaites"Canberra Times" (06/02/2012)

The message contained in this book is so powerful that Liu has been imprisoned solely for exercising his right to free expression. The awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Liu is a testament to the strength of his message and to all the Chinese activists who sacrificed their lives and so much else in the pursuit of freedom and democracy in China. The essays of Liu Xiaobo have inspired freedom loving people not only in China but around the world.--Nancy Pelosi, House Democratic Leader

Liu Xiaobo insists on "living in truth." Each time I re-read his astute essays and merciless self-dissections, I am struck again: here truly is a different kind of Chinese intellectual. The essential value of the essays in this volume springs from that very source: Liu Xiaobo lives in truth; he is different.--Ding Zilin, Founder Of The Tiananmen Mothers

Presented in a lucid and persuasive manner with obvious but well restrained moral passion, this book offers a leading Chinese intellectual dissident's thoughts over the past two decades on his persistent efforts to bring about a free, democratic and civilized China. Liu's engage writings keep alive the modern Chinese tradition of intellectual pursuit of liberal democracy and constitute another page of individual struggle for human freedom and dignity. This book is for anyone who is concerned with a better China and a better world.--Josephine Chiu-Duke, University Of British Colombia

The massacre in Beijing in 1989 turned Liu Xiaobo, almost literally overnight, toward passionate pursuit of democracy, constitutional government, and respect for the dignity of the individual person. The quest has sent him to prison four times, yet he insists that he "has no enemies." Some day, I am sure, his works will be available in China for his fellow citizens to read and discuss. He has never let go of the present, and is sure to win the future. He belongs to China--just as China, in part, belongs to him.--Pu Zhiqiang, Rights Lawyer, Beijing

The voice of Liu Xiaobo, though silenced in his motherland, is a voice that conveys the long-cherished aspirations of the Chinese people. It is our good fortune that we now have this voice in English translation which, while faithful to the original meaning, also preserves the power of his original message.--Ying-Shih Yu, Princeton University

Liu Xiaobo's brilliant essays express more than political dissidence in China. They do that too, heroically. But they are also the work of a first rate literary intellectual, whose ideas are of universal value. In three words: sharp, witty, and above all, humane.--Ian Buruma, Author Of Bad Elements: Chinese Rebels From Los Angeles To Beijing

I am happy to learn that the selected writings of Liu Xiaobo are being published in a book entitled No Enemies, No Hatred. In 2008, when hundreds of Chinese intellectuals and concerned citizens inspired by Liu Xiaobo signed Charter 08, calling for democracy and freedom in China, I was personally moved and expressed my admiration for their courage and their goals in public. The international community also recognized Liu Xiaobo's valuable contribution in urging China to take steps towards political, legal and constitutional reforms by supporting the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to him in 2010. Considering the writer himself remains imprisoned, this book is a powerful reminder of his courage and his vision for a new China. I believe that in the coming years, future generations of Chinese will enjoy the fruits of the efforts that Chinese citizens today are making towards the introduction of a more open and responsible governance. I would also like to take this opportunity to renew my call to the Chinese government to release him and other prisoners of conscience.--The Dalai Lama

Freedom of expression may be irritating to some, but its absence is harmful to all. Without the freedom of expression there can be no lasting progress because without critical voices in the society there is no protection against error and abuse in the exercise of power. Liu Xiaobo is paying a harsh price for speaking out. I invite you to read his work, as a tribute to his courage, and as an inspiration for your own.--Thorbjorn Jagland, Chairman Of The Norwegian Nobel Committee

Though he is an equal in many respects to Vaclav Havel, who contributed a foreword to this volume, Liu is not as literary a figure. Instead, his voice is humble and inelegant, if vigorous. Liu's style reflects his enthusiastic adoption of the Internet, and his strong identification with netizens everywhere. His writing would be simply informative if his subjects were not so urgent, and the clarity of his moral stance not so gem-hard, crystal-clear, and necessary.--Michael Autrey"Booklist" (12/15/2011)

Like so many who admire Liu Xiaobo--a Chinese author and critic who was awarded the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize for his human rights work--until I read "No Enemies, No Hatred", I was so awed by his nobility as a fighter that I had overlooked his depth as a thinker. If, as Liu believes, a society's morality is its backbone, the book raises difficult questions about China's future as a superpower. He wonders, for example, what will happen as the Internet ultimately forces China's authoritarian ruling class to confront the ugly truth about its rule. Yet even as he walks the reader through China's dark side, Liu's optimism shines through--and it's hard not to come away believing, as he does, that history is on his side.--Jimmy Lai"Wall Street Journal" (12/17/2011)

Much like Vaclav Havel's collection Open Letters, No Enemies, No Hatred seeks to give readers the most comprehensive summary of the immense output of this literary scholar and social critic...The writings span from just before the Tiananmen Square demonstrations to just before [Liu's] imprisonment 20 years later...The translations create for English language readers a sense of a man who writes with eloquence, knowledge and moral clarity in the impassioned defense of human rights...Liu's vision for China is sweeping, even epic. Its expression harkens not to the theoretical obfuscation of Mao, but to the clarity of Thomas Paine and Niccolo Machiavelli. Like their works, Liu's comes at a critical time: when Western citizens need to truly learn about the multitudes that define the rising superpower that is Liu's China; and when they need to be led not just by a rousing voice but by a guiding one.--Chris R. Morgan"Open Letters Monthly" (04/01/2012)

China's most prominent dissident, Liu's essays and poems in this excellent collection...speak eloquently of his fearless commitment to defending human dignity, as well as his insight into China's history and culture.--P. D. Smith"The Guardian" (06/22/2013)

About the Author

Liu Xiaobo, winner of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize, is a Chinese writer and human rights activist.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)

Amazon.com: 4.8 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Tres Bien 5 Jun. 2012
By Nom de Tome - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
I have just come off reading "Public Enemies", and have embarked on Mr. Liu's book. I am about halfway through and am loving it. I wish it didn't end, except with a happy ending for the Chinese People. With all the crap going on in the world, you forget, or at least are not reminded, that there are still people like this in the world. A very, very brave man, whom I wish I had some more direct means of supporting. This is an excellent read, especially if you want to have your faith that there are those who still battle for the "right" in the world. Be warned however, of the other component of this book, which is equally depressing, as the rest of the book is uplifting, is the smallness and cruelty of oligarchy. Given the direction of our own USA, I would say this book is also very instructive, a must read.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Chinese dissident 28 Dec. 2012
By MGrev - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
This book is heartbreaking, and beautiful. Liu Xiaobo is an amzaing human being with incredible empathy. We can all learn from him.
5.0 out of 5 stars good 16 Sept. 2013
By Yuan XUE - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
very good book indicating the mental world of Chinese modern society and help to understand what the Party has done recent 30 years
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars one of a kind 10 Jan. 2012
By Zlata Konevski - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
There are, and have been many heroes of freedom, and some of these heroes have been able to share their experiences of imprisonment by writing. Liu Xiaobo wrote essays and poems. His essays enable us to share his insights into the workings of the Chinese Communist party, and the effect of the system on the Chinese people.
It is a very personal account, and anyone who is interested in human rights should read this book, and understand why this admirable man of conscience is being held in jail
9 of 14 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Unimpressive - if iconic 15 Feb. 2012
By Sceptique500 - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Four stars honor the man - Nobel Peace Prize winner LIU - rather than the book. There is no question about the high moral standards of this Chinese intellectual, and his deep commitment to freedom, non-violence, and human dignity. He "writes without fear" - so the Introduction - in a country where everyone is a fearful opportunist. Few have his courage. Repeatedly he has been thrown in jail - evidence of the inability of the dictatorial leadership to handle the least dissent. Before it is a crime, it is a stupid mistake, for which the CCP will pay dearly.

The book is a selection meant to "reflect the breadth of his interests and the range of his erudition" (p. xxi). It also includes poetry, some of it of very high quality.

His "political views" are rather standard fare: "bottom-up approach" by an emergent civil society bent on slowly asserting its role in the country: "China's transition toward a modern, free society must necessarily be gradual and tortuous, and the amount of time it will take might well be more than anyone estimates." (p. 21). At this level of generality one would wholeheartedly agree - with a sidelong glance to all those ringside coaches who'd want China to leap into full-fledged democracy tomorrow.

No revolution, however, ever managed to handle diversity as the movement became victorious - not even the American one, which required a Civil War to settle the unspoken issue of slavery. Gandhi himself failed and paid for it with his life. The core issue in China would seem to be diversity, from Urumchi to Lhasa, and every county in between. The author does not even seem aware of this problem - Xinjiang is not mentioned in the Index. Yet, if one wishes for a "bottom up" approach, one would want to reflect on how to handle emerging diversity. Just flagging the issue would have been important.

A chapter is devoted to "land issues". Rightly so, for the Chinese peasant has suffered most from the events of the last century, and its dispossession at the hands of the CCP was disgraceful. The angle of the author's attack, however, is a strange one. The farmers he quotes wanting to "repossess the land" are not those who intend to farm it, rather to sell it to speculators themselves (p. 36). Windfall gains are allocated conventionally - there is no "self-evident" entitlement, and the state (but not its officials) has a justified claim on a share.

Another section deals with urban development. The high-handed fashion authorities use to get the job done is despicable. The wanton destruction in search of the "modern image" is senseless - but probably not much different from what Haussmann did to Paris in the XIXth century. Building capitals "from scratch" is, however, a Chinese tradition going back at least two thousand years, and the quarters for the populace in the new were not much better that military camp barracks (see: The Early Chinese Empires: Qin and Han (History of Imperial China)), laid out so as to guarantee effective surveillance rather than in accordance to the whimsy of the occupants. What counts, however, is whether the current one-storied housing park might be rehabilitated at a reasonable cost. The design (often screened structures) and lack of infrastructure (water, sewer) as well as the overly extensive layout pose difficult, possibly intractable problems. If one wants to build a civil society "from the bottom up" these would be core self-help issues worth addressing.

On "China as a great power" the author's thoughts appear muddled. In the same essay he writes: "Westerners sometimes stir up the "China threat" as a way to warn themselves, but in terms of the actual world situation such a view is unnecessarily alarmist. China's infatuation with its "rise as a great nation" is primarily a recoil from its feelings of extreme inferiority in earlier times..." (p. 236). He goes on to say: "The Chinese Communists have abandoned their ideology and are not pursuing global military confrontation in the way the Soviets did." (p. 238). Yet he concludes: "When the "rise" of a large dictatorial state that commands rapidly increasing economic strength meets with NO EFFECTIVE DETERRENCE (my emphasis) from outside, but only an attitude of appeasement from the international mainstream..." (p. 239). How could one deter - by economic means?

There is a moralistic tone of some of his chapters (e.g. "The erotic carnival in recent Chinese history"). One just needs to read some of the comments the Ancient Greeks made, or Confucius, about declining contemporary moral and sexual standards to see that nothing has changed under the sun. Not even Queen Victoria was her father's daughter (see: The Victorians): I'd take jeremiads about loose morals with a goodly (if not godly) pinch of salt. One would at least need to know how pervasive of all groups of Chinese society such a change is - or is it just trenzy froth?

The Chapter on Confucius is remarkable, and one would have wished the editors had included more such insightful pieces, rather than ephemeral ones like those on the uses of the internet.

Summing up, clearly the author is wholly ethically engaged. This is his great strength, and as a person he deserves our full respect and admiration. Analytically, however, his thinking is rather superficial (even Western mainstream conventional) and, what's more relevant, distant from the grassroots of his own country. When Gandhi returned from South Africa he travelled widely to learn issues first hand. There is no indication that the author did more than virtual travel on the internet. His failure e.g. to engage in this book with the extraordinary progress, yet invisibleness, of women in China underscores my point - not that his wife Tao Li failed to draw his attention to this (p. 124).

This brings me to the last remark, addressed to the editors - presumably the author was not involved in the choice of the articles to be included. LIU's views on international issues (the role of the US in Iraq, or the Palestinian-Israeli issue) are rather remarkable - in view of his overarching concern for "matters such as the fate of humanity, the future of the globe, or fulfillment in the lives of individual human beings" (p. 118). He is entitled to them, of course, but if the book is a tribute to the man - and not the icon - one regrets that this aspect of his thinking has been carefully elided.
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