Title: Chinese Nationalism: Origins and ForeignDomestic Policy
1Chinese Nationalism Origins and Foreign/Domestic
Policy
- May 11, 2005
- Presentation by Lisa Wu
2Why study nationalism?
- Foreign Policy
- Nationalism is a keyif not the keymotivator of
Chinese foreign policy - Cultural Insight
- Culturalism and Nationalism are linked
- Historical Insight
- Driving force of change
- Domestic Insight
- Chinas governance problems and resolutions
linked to nationalism
3What is nationalism?
- Nationalism behavior designed to restore,
maintain or advance public images of a nation
(Peter Hayes Gries, China Rising) - Nationalism doctrines or a set of ideas that
dictate political action or movement in the
modern world (Suisheng Zhao, A Nation-State by
Construction) - Separate from patriotism and culturalism
4Nationalism difficult to study
- Different forms of nationalism in China
- Local/Regional nationalism
- Ethnic nationalism
- Cultural nationalism
- all of which come into play differently in
different contexts
5Origins of Nationalism
- Mid-19th century colonialism Chinas defeat at
the hands of the West - Multiple nation-states
- China Middle Kingdom
- Culturalism/cultural unity
- Univeralism
- Superiority
- Critique Viable from an intellectual standpoint,
but discounts the identity factor. China
exhibited nationalistic behaviors in past
6International Relations some background
- Rationalism Sovereign states are rational
actors towards their own self-interests. Protect
security. Relations are determined by level of
power. States are aggressive and constrained
only by opposing powers. - Liberalism the preferences of states, not their
capabilities determine their behavior. Belief
that economic and cultural development will bring
about democratization.
7The New Rise of Chinese Nationalism
- New wave of Anti-Westernism (1990s)
- Origins
- Reaction/response
- Modernization ? Westernization
- Identity?Behavior (constructivist)
- Understanding foreign and domestic policy
- Make China strong again
8New Nationalism
- 1993 bid for 2000 Olympic Games
- The China That Can Say No and The Plot to
Demonize China - Economic growth greater than West
- West begins to see China as threat
- Desire for China to emerge as an important and
respected international power - Economic growth
- International cooperation
- CCPs legitimacy
- Double-edged, lose autonomy
9Something important that makes China unique
- Authoritarian - free, disconnected from people
- Democratic constrained by public
- This is NOT the case with China b/c of
nationalistic influences and two level
governance party/people
10Critiques/Questions
- Academic definition of nationalism to
inapplicable. Decoupling from culturalism - How is nationalism indoctrinated? What does this
have to do with a formation of a distinct Chinese
identity? Is top-down from government, or
bottom-up grassroots? Strong cultural/historical
pride component? - How do the Chinese reconcile competing
nationalisms (ie north/south) when uniting
against foreign powers (ie Japan)? What are the
priorities of these different nationalisms, and
when are the Chinese able to set them aside? Do
these different nationalisms compete when the CCP
is trying to make up foreign and domestic policy?
11Summary/Reading List
- General agreement on books, write about different
facets (foreign policy, identity, governance,
origin, history) - Barme, Geremie R. (1996). To Screw Foreigners is
Patriotic Chinas Avant-Garde Nationalism. In
Chinese Nationalism (pp.183-208). Armonk, NY
M.E. Sharpe, Inc. - Gries, Peter H. (2005). Nationalism an Chinese
Foreign Policy. In Y. Deng F. Wang (Eds.),
China Rising Power and Motivation in Chinese
Foreign Policy (pp. 103-120). Lanham, MD Rowman
Littlefield. - Zhao, Suisheng (2004). The Origins of Chinese
Nationalism. In A Nation-State by Construction
(pp. 37-78). Stanford, CA Stanford University
Press. - Zheng, Yongnian (1999). Discovering Chinese
Nationalism. In Discovering Chinese Nationalism
in China (pp. 1-20). Cambridge, UK Cambridge
University Press.