ABSTRACT

Reflecting on the “clash of civilizations” as its point of departure, this book is based on a series of sixteen of the author’s interconnected, thematically focused lectures and calls for new perspectives to resist imperialistic homogeneity.

Situated within a neo-humanist context, the book applies interactive cognition from an Asian perspective within which China can be perceived as an essential “other,” making it highly relevant in the quest for global solutions to the many grave issues facing humankind today. The author critiques American, European, and Chinese points of view, highlighting the significance of difference and the necessity of dialogue, before, ultimately, rethinking the nature of world literature and putting forward interactive cognition as a means of “reconciliation” between cultures. Chinese culture, as a frame of reference endowed with traditions of “harmony without homogeneity”, may help to alleviate global cultural confrontation and even reconstruct the understanding of human civilization.

The book will be essential reading for scholars and students of Comparative Literature, Chinese Studies, and all those who are interested in cross-cultural communication and Chinese culture in general.

chapter 1|21 pages

The Context of the Times

The Clash of Civilizations and the Future

chapter 4|14 pages

The American, European, and Chinese Dreams

An Example of Cultural Transformation

chapter 6|9 pages

Interactive Cognition

The Case of Literature–Science Interaction

chapter 8|11 pages

Difference and Dialogue

chapter 14|12 pages

Where to, Where from, and When

The Quest of Wang Guowei

chapter 15|17 pages

The Enquiries of Lu Xun in His Early Years