ABSTRACT

This book traces ideological trends in China through a range of historical and comparative perspectives, spanning the ancient belief systems of Confucianism, Legalism, and Taoism to political ideologies of the present day.

Chapters in this edited volume are divided into four parts: traditional Chinese ideology, ideology of the Republic, Maoism as an ideology and post Mao ideology, zoning in on specific historical periods from the Qing and Republic periods to the reform era, as well as the period after the founding of the PRC – through which Mao Zedong’s political thought is notably discussed from the perspective of epistemology and the global impact of Maoism. Key topics include Sun Yat-sen as the Father of the Republic, Li Dazhao, the early Marxist theoretician, Chiang Kai-shek and his nationalist Fascism, Liang Qichao’s emotional appeals through liberal political discourse, Jiang Zemin’s theory of ‘Three Represents’ de-emphasising the Marxist concept of class, Hu Jintao’s theory of ‘Harmonious Society’ and Xi Jinping’s political thought. Contributions from world-leading scholars take both comparative and critical approaches, examining not only how studies of ideology are relevant, but how Chinese ideologies have retained their own characteristics distinct to the West. 

As the first comprehensive study of this subject in the English language, Chinese Ideology will appeal to students and scholars of philosophy, political science, history, and Asian studies more broadly.

part 1|74 pages

Traditional Chinese ideology

chapter 2|14 pages

Roots and branches

Self-cultivation as political transformation in neo-Confucian thought

chapter 3|15 pages

Once upon a pandemic

Confucius, Rosemont, Marx, Deleuze, and the opportunity for a Confucian ideology

chapter 4|17 pages

The Daoist contribution to Chinese ideology

A political reading of Heshang Gong's Daodejing

part 2|74 pages

Ideology of the Republic

chapter 8|20 pages

Fascism with Chinese characteristics

Chiang Kai-shek's nationalist vision in the 1930s and implications for U.S.-PRC rivalry today

chapter 9|18 pages

Liang Qichao and affective liberalism

part 3|32 pages

Maoism as an ideology

chapter 11|13 pages

Global Maoism

part 4|70 pages

Post-Mao ideology

chapter 12|20 pages

Assessing the era of Jiang Zemin

chapter 13|15 pages

Ideology-building under Hu Jintao

Reacting to Jiang and paving the way for Xi

chapter 15|18 pages

A reversal of the reform?

China's fifth constitutional amendment