GUANGZHOU, once known to the Western world
as
Canton , leaves many people with the
unfavourable impression that China dwells in
relentless chaos and that the city is simply a bad
caricature of Hong Kong. Guangzhou is indeed very
much modern China pushed to the limits: the traffic
and pollution are horrendous, bridges and crumbling
flyovers which seemed ludicrously over-ambitious
when built in the mid-1980s now groan under the
weight of vehicles and shelter the homeless during
wet weather, and the city seems not so much to be
booming as blowing apart at the seams. Buffeted by
the crowds, travellers tend to stay only long enough
to tackle a couple of temples and museums before
organizing a ticket out, hoping that the rest of the
country will prove less overwhelming.
Solidly geared to business rather than tourism,
it may seem in any case that Guangzhou has little to
offer the casual visitor. In purely practical terms,
however, while the city is expensive compared with
some parts of China, it's considerably cheaper
than Hong Kong - particularly in regard to shopping
and onward travel . Airfares into China from
Guangzhou are about half what you'd pay south of the
border, allowing big savings even after you factor
in transport from Hong Kong and a night's
accommodation. You'll also find that, having
mastered the initial shock, Guangzhou is a city you
can learn to enjoy. Compared with Beijing's
bureaucratic aloofness or the image-conscious
populace of Shanghai, the city's inhabitants are
immediately upfront, and pleasantly indifferent to
foreign faces after two thousand years of contact
with the outside world. They're also compulsively
garrulous, turning Guangzhou's two famous obsessions
- eating and business - into social
occasions, and filling streets, restaurants and
buildings with the alternately guttural and musical
sounds of Yuehua, the rhythmic Cantonese
language. Guangzhou has also traditionally been the
first place where foreign influences have seeped
into the country, often through returning Overseas
Chinese, and this is where to watch for the latest
fashions and to see how China will interpret alien
styles. The sounds of techno, Canto-pop, and punk
fill the night-clubs here, not karaoke and Chinese
folk tunes, and youths in leather and blue-tinted,
wraparound sunglasses ride Japanese Harley-Davidson
clones. Although the city lacks any great sights,
you can easily ditch its Western veneer by wandering
into the maze of flagstoned back lanes, in search of
monuments and busy markets hidden away from casual
observers.
The City
of Guangzhou
Depending on your mood, Guangzhou can be
compulsively energetic or disturbingly intense -
either way, not somewhere to come for peace and
relaxation. Commerce is its lifeblood, a religion
inspiring everybody from train station pickpockets
to company...
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