Who's afraid of China? The challenge of Chinese soft power [Review]


Autoria(s): Hartig, Falk
Data(s)

15/01/2013

Resumo

What role does China play in Western imagination and how does it affect Western selfconceptions? The rise of China as an alternative model to Western liberalism has created a fear that developing countries will stray from Western standards of democracy, transparency and human rights. However, such fears often say as much about those who hold them as they do about China itself. In this short and easily readable book Barr holds a mirror to Sino–Western relations in order to better understand how the West’s own past, hopes and fears shape the way it thinks about and engages with China. Focusing on three key areas—models of development, soft power and ethnocentrism—he argues that the rise of China ‘hits a nerve in the Western psyche . . . because its actions reflect the West’s own ambivalence to modernity and uncertainty over the proper role and limits of state power’ (p. 21). To make his point, Barr focuses on China’s soft power and the connections between China’s domestic politics and its attempts to shape its image internationally...

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/59569/

Publicador

Routledge

Relação

DOI:10.1080/09668136.2012.736676

Hartig, Falk (2013) Who's afraid of China? The challenge of Chinese soft power [Review]. Europe-Asia Studies, 65(1), pp. 165-166.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 Routledge

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty; School of Media, Entertainment & Creative Arts

Palavras-Chave #soft power #China
Tipo

Journal Article