Opinion | Forget Texas, China came out when Deng tipped his hat to Japan
- The West remembers Deng Xiaoping’s trip to the US in 1979, but it was his historic visit to Japan months earlier that really opened China’s eyes to modernisation
For Western historians, the signal moment for China’s coming out in the modern age was Deng Xiaoping’s trip to America in early 1979, a visit memorable for a single image – of the diminutive, Mao-suited vice-premier donning an oversized cowboy hat at a Texas rodeo.
For historians with a wider lens, especially in Asia, Deng’s trip to Japan months earlier was an equally transformative event.
Japanese cars were popular, and its televisions and electronics were flooding foreign stores. The country’s steel mills were putting overseas rivals out of business, leaving the beginnings of a rust belt across the American Midwest, a process China’s factories would accentuate two decades later.
Deng arrived in Japan a hardened figure, the survivor of multiple wars, revolutionary conflict and Maoist purges. But he seemed to sense – as he trekked through Japan’s state-of-the-art factories, and rode its famous trains – that he was witnessing a new industrial revolution.