Sinicizing international relations : self, civilization, and intellectual politics in subaltern East Asia

Bibliographic Information

Sinicizing international relations : self, civilization, and intellectual politics in subaltern East Asia

Chih-yu Shih

Palgrave Macmillan, 2013

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [213]-236) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The book brings civilizational politics back to the studies of international relations and foreign policy through a study of the multiple meanings of international relations and related terms in East Asia and the intrinsic relation of international relations to individual choices of scholarly identity.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Transcending National Identities PART I: A WORLD SINICIZED INTO HARMONY: CENTRALIZED PERSPECTIVES Harmonious Realism: Undecidable Responses to the China Threat Harmonious Racism: China's Civilizational Soft Power in Africa PART II: CHINA INTERNATIONAL AND INTELLECTUAL: PERSPECTIVES BEYOND Taiwan Chinese: Encountering and Choice in Postcolonial Scholarship Global Chinese: Contending Approaches to Defending Chineseness PART III: CHINA SUBALTERN AND DIFFERENT: PERSPECTIVES BELOW Urban Chinese: Self-Sinicization as a Method of Political Stability Village Chinese: Anomaly as a Method of Chinese Transition PART IV: WORLDING EAST ASIA THROUGH CHINA: MULTISITED PERSPECTIVES Japanese Asian: Absence of China 1997 in Japan Times Reporting Korean Asian: The Sinic Tribute System of China and Its Equals Global Asian: China as Position between Host and Home Conclusion: Serious Hypocrisy

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