Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:679Hits:20086205Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID141450
Title ProperHistory, tradition and the China dream
Other Title Informationsocialist modernization in the world of great harmony
LanguageENG
AuthorCallahan, William A
Summary / Abstract (Note)How will China influence world politics in the twenty-first century? Many people answer this question by looking to Chinese history, and particularly to traditional models of Chinese world order. This essay seeks to complicate this question by asking which history, and which tradition? While it is common to look at China's pre-modern history as ‘tradition’, this essay argues that we also need to appreciate how ‘socialism’ is treated as a tradition alongside Chinese civilization. It does this by examining how China's public intellectuals appeal to two seemingly odd sources: Mao Zedong's 1956 speech ‘Strengthen Party Unity and Carry Forward Party Traditions’, and the ‘Great Harmony’ passage from the two millennia-old Book of Rites. It will argue that these two passages are employed as a way of salvaging socialism; the ideological transition thus is not from communism to nationalism, but to a curious combination of socialism and Chinese civilization. This new socialist/civilization dynamic integrates equality and hierarchy into a new form of statism, which is involved in a global competition of social models. Or to put it another way, what these two passages have in common is not necessarily a positive ideal, but a common enemy: liberalism, the West and the United States.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Contemporary China Vol. 24, No.96; Nov 2015: p.983-1001
Journal SourceJournal of Contemporary China Vol: 24 No 96
Key WordsWorld Politics ;  Chinese Civilization ;  Tradition ;  China Dream ;  History ;  Chinese World Order ;  Socialist Modernization ;  Great Harmony ;  China's Pre-Modern History ;  West and the United States


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text