China's traditional, modern and Neo-Socialist world orders
To explore twenty-first century discussions of China’s alternative world order, this chapter argues that we need to not only consider traditional world orders (All-under-Heaven – tianxia; Great Harmony – datong, and the Tributary System) but also examine the twentieth century’s modern revolutionary...
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2024
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-53412024-12-24T03:01:11Z China's traditional, modern and Neo-Socialist world orders CALLAHAN, William A. To explore twenty-first century discussions of China’s alternative world order, this chapter argues that we need to not only consider traditional world orders (All-under-Heaven – tianxia; Great Harmony – datong, and the Tributary System) but also examine the twentieth century’s modern revolutionary world orders (Kang Youwei’s Great Harmony, Sun Yat-sen’s Three People’s Principles and Mao Zedong’s Three Worlds). Importantly, this is not simply a chronological “history of ideas” that traces China’s transition from traditional empire to modern nation-state. Rather it argues that in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries tradition and modernity are entangled: Kang and Sun revived All-under-Heaven and Great Harmony to think about China’s global role in the early twentieth century; Mao Zedong used Great Harmony and Kang Youwei to think about his communist utopia, and Xi Jinping mixes All-under-Heaven, Great Harmony and Marxism in his new ideology of “Socialism with Chinese characteristics for the New Era.” The chapter explores how twenty-first century world orders, thus, are not post-socialist but “neo-socialist” in the sense of syncretically mixing Chinese tradition, capitalist modernity and socialist modernity. 2024-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4082 info:doi/10.4324/9781003044710-5 Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University China neo-socialist socialism Asian Studies Political Science |
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China neo-socialist socialism Asian Studies Political Science CALLAHAN, William A. China's traditional, modern and Neo-Socialist world orders |
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To explore twenty-first century discussions of China’s alternative world order, this chapter argues that we need to not only consider traditional world orders (All-under-Heaven – tianxia; Great Harmony – datong, and the Tributary System) but also examine the twentieth century’s modern revolutionary world orders (Kang Youwei’s Great Harmony, Sun Yat-sen’s Three People’s Principles and Mao Zedong’s Three Worlds). Importantly, this is not simply a chronological “history of ideas” that traces China’s transition from traditional empire to modern nation-state. Rather it argues that in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries tradition and modernity are entangled: Kang and Sun revived All-under-Heaven and Great Harmony to think about China’s global role in the early twentieth century; Mao Zedong used Great Harmony and Kang Youwei to think about his communist utopia, and Xi Jinping mixes All-under-Heaven, Great Harmony and Marxism in his new ideology of “Socialism with Chinese characteristics for the New Era.” The chapter explores how twenty-first century world orders, thus, are not post-socialist but “neo-socialist” in the sense of syncretically mixing Chinese tradition, capitalist modernity and socialist modernity. |
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text |
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CALLAHAN, William A. |
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CALLAHAN, William A. |
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CALLAHAN, William A. |
title |
China's traditional, modern and Neo-Socialist world orders |
title_short |
China's traditional, modern and Neo-Socialist world orders |
title_full |
China's traditional, modern and Neo-Socialist world orders |
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China's traditional, modern and Neo-Socialist world orders |
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China's traditional, modern and Neo-Socialist world orders |
title_sort |
china's traditional, modern and neo-socialist world orders |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2024 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4082 |
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