In 1974 Roland Barthes travelled in China as part of a small delegation
of distinguished French philosophers and literary figures. They arrived
in China just as the last stage of the Cultural Revolution was getting
underway - the campaign to criticize Lin Biao and Confucius. While they
were welcomed by writers and academics, the travelers were required to
follow a pre-established itinerary, visiting factories and construction
sites, frequenting shows and restaurants that were the mainstay of
Western visitors to China in the 70s.
Barthes planned to return from the trip with a book on China: the book
never materialized, but he kept the diary notes he wrote at the time.
The notes on things seen, smelled and heard alternate with reflections
and remarks - meditations, critiques or notes of sympathy, an aside from
the surrounding world. Published now for the first time more than thirty
years after the trip, these notebooks offer a unique portrait of China
at a time of turbulence and change, seen through the eyes of the world's
greatest semiotician.