{"id":151420,"date":"2013-02-14T14:06:57","date_gmt":"2013-02-14T22:06:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/?p=151420"},"modified":"2013-02-14T14:22:33","modified_gmt":"2013-02-14T22:22:33","slug":"further-doubt-cast-over-ping-fus-memoir","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2013\/02\/further-doubt-cast-over-ping-fus-memoir\/","title":{"rendered":"Further Doubt Cast Over Ping Fu’s Memoir"},"content":{"rendered":"
When successful entrepreneur, Obama adviser and immigrant success story Ping Fu published her memoir Bend, Not Break<\/em> in late December, it initially met<\/a> with much critical acclaim<\/a>. After a positive review from Forbes<\/a> was translated and posted to their Chinese-language portal<\/a>, Chinese netizens and academics<\/a> sought to debunk Fu’s portrayal of her time during the Cultural Revolution, which they saw as exaggerated and, at times, completely fabricated. The author then defended her account by softening some of her claims<\/a>. At his South China Morning Post blog, John Kennedy summarizes the debate that unfolded in web-articles and their accompanying comment sections<\/strong><\/a>:<\/p>\n […]Meanwhile, press coverage of Fu and her book was almost exclusively as uncritical as it was patronising, led by The Daily Beast<\/a>, Huffington Post<\/a>,\u00a0Forbes<\/a> as well as others<\/a>.<\/p>\n Exhaustive attempts were made in comment sections to explain the issue, but Fu’s supporters appeared unwilling to listen. Even senior Reuters editor Harold Evans (and husband of Daily Beast founder Tina Brown) turned out to vouch for Fu, calling online appeals to reason a persecution<\/a>.<\/p>\n Of course by this time actual internet trolls, the ones who fabricate China’s history in the opposite direction, had joined in, but all of this appeared lost on Fu’s unquestioning cheerleaders who, variously, dismissed all the feedback as an attack by\u00a0Chinese internet vigilantes<\/a>, a coordinated smear campaign<\/a>\u00a0against Fu, now placed high<\/a> “on the vituperative frontline of cyber hostilities between China and the West”.[…]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n