Confucius and the Curate’s Egg: The Morality of China in Africa – a
review by Keith Somerville



May 16, 2013









It is oddly appropriate that in reviewing a book that expends many
pages in slightly obscure, not always enlightening and often whimsical
accounts of the philosophy of Confucianism and folk tales of the
Middle Kingdom, that I should employ a very English euphemism taken
from a Punch cartoon from the Victorian era to characterize it. For
those who don’t know the cartoon, it shows a young Church of England
curate at breakfast with his bishop. The curate’s egg is bad – but so
as not to slight his superior he insists that parts of it are
excellent.  That is rather the case with Stephen Chan’s book looking
at the morality of China’s relations with Africa.

Having worked through it over a couple of days there were a few
passages that were excellent but I was not convinced in the end that
this would enable me to be as diplomatic or perhaps as obsequious as
the curate. But I did feel that a little whimsy was appropriate as so
much of the book has a strange, whimsical character that does not
always sit well with the seriousness of the subject.

I do always worry when a book about Africa has in the title the words
“Dark Continent”. It smacks of the sarcastic advice Binyavanga
Wainaina gave to writers about Africa in his well-known Granta article
in 2005 – darkness was a metaphor he clearly thought people should
avoid.  Stephen Chan, I’m sure, intends its use to highlight some of
the less sophisticated Chinese views that persist about Africa.  But
it crops up in the book every now and again, as when one contributor,
Jerru Liu, notes that “the behaviour of the descendants of Confucius
in the Dark Continent is difficult for the West to understand”; one
does wonder whether other constructions might have been better to get
this across. It is one thing using the phrase to depict bluntly how
many Chinese have preconceptions about Africans, as many Westerners
also do, but another when trying to describe wider perceptions of
Chinese behaviour in his own words.

And it is often the choice of language, of long passages about
Confucianism and the Middle Kingdom, that make this a frustrating book
to read.  Every now and then one gets glimpses of what could be
valuable insights into Chinese approaches to Africa – as the majority
of those writing in this slim volume are of Chinese origin – but the
whimsical prose or somewhat obscure Confucian discourse then shroud
the issue.  We get a lot of folksy or sentimental passages – about how
Chan was touched to see Zimbabwean guerrilla leaders eating with
chopsticks or how he at one stage seemed popular in Africa because his
long-hair meant Africans seemed to equate him with the Shaolin monks
of martial arts movies – but these do little in the end to increase
the reader’s understanding of the issue of morality in China’s
dealings with Africa or the nature and detail of those dealings.

The blurb on the back of the book says that the work “undermines
existing assumptions concerning Sino-African relations”.  If there was
any undermining going on it was of any lingering doubts about the
racist attitudes of many Chinese towards Africa and Africans.
Outlining how “Africa is indeed part of the traditionally ‘barbarian’
world” in Chinese terminology, Chan goes on to say that explanations
of the use of white devils for Europeans and black devils for Africans
cannot be written off as metaphors for something less insulting, “they
were condescending insults”; he then adds that “popular speech in
China still uses these labels” (p.17). If that is his judgement on
Chinese views of Africans, then it says little for the moral basis of
the overall Chinese approach to Africa. He emphasises the point with
the old Chinese story of Meng Huo who is crude in his tastes and
behaviour but is allowed to remain a king under the tutelage of the
virtuous Zhu of the Middle Kingdom – Meng Huo – who, like Africa, is a
barbarian and “Barbarians, even those adopted as younger brothers,
never quite cease being barbarians” (p. 21).

In between the folk-tales and excursions into Confucianism, there is
some detail of the development of Chinese-African relations over time.
 I would have liked more of this and greater detail about current
trade and investment relations and more in-depth analysis of the
problems encountered – such as the repeated and bitter violence
between Chinese mine bosses and miners in Africa and growing
resentment of the expanding numbers of Chinese migrants and small
traders across Africa.

The accounts are interesting, but patchy. So we get reference to
China’s support for Savimbi’s UNITA against the MPLA in Angola, but no
reference to the extensive arms deliveries and military training given
to Roberto’s FNLA via Mobutu’s Zaire in combination with the CIA – the
escalation of external intervention in the developing civil war that
was arguably decisive in bringing the Soviet Union and Cuba into the
conflict.  We get nothing of substance on the use of Chinese rather
than African workers on a lot of projects and of the role Chinese
retailers play in undercutting their African rivals by importing cheap
and subsidised Chinese manufactured goods that, for example, have
severely damaged the Nigerian textile industry or reduced South
Africa’s trade in manufactured goods with the rest of Africa.

Comparing this volume with Chris Alden’s excellent and detailed China
in Africa published by African Arguments and Zed in 2007, I am tempted
to ask why Zed didn’t ask Alden for a second, updated edition rather
than invest in a discursive and somewhat obscure volume that tells the
reader more about the author’s feelings and musings than about the
crux of a very important subject for Africa.

Stephen Chan (ed) The Morality of China in Africa:  The Middle Kingdom
and the Dark Continent is pubklished by Zed Books, London. ISBN 978 1
78032 567 5 hb; ISBN 978 1 78032 566 8 pb.  £14.99

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