ABSTRACT

The social sciences have been heavily influenced by modernization theory, focusing on issues of economic growth, political development and social change, in order to develop a predictive model of linear progress for developing countries following a Western prototype. Under this hegemonic paradigm of development the world tends to get divided into simplistic binary oppositions between the ‘West’ and the ‘rest’, ‘us’ and ‘them’ and ‘self’ and ‘other’.

Proposing to shift the discussion on what constitutes the ‘Other’ as opposed to the ‘Self’ from philosophy and cultural studies to the social sciences, this book explores how the structural asymmetries existing between Western discourses and the realities of the non-Western world manifest themselves in the ideas, institutions and socio-political practices of India and China, and in how far they shape the social scientist’s understanding of their discipline in general. It provides a counter-narrative by revealing the relativity of geographies, and by showing that the conventional presentation of core elements of the Asian socio-political set-up as ‘aberrations’ from the Western models fails to acknowledge their inherent strategic character of adapting Western concepts to meet local requirements.

Drawing on multiple disciplines, concepts and contexts in India and China, the book makes a valuable contribution to the theory and practice of politics, as well as to International and Asian Studies.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Politics of the ‘Other' in India and China – Western concepts in non-Western contexts

part |98 pages

Concepts in context

chapter |17 pages

Stretching secularism

Conceptual equivocality in the Indian context

chapter |13 pages

Muslim citizens versus citizen Muslims

A study of discursive strategies in contemporary India

chapter |11 pages

‘Back to the roots'

The indigenisation of Western party politics in post-colonial India

chapter |13 pages

Indian federalism

A hybrid solution to the problem of diversity and political order

chapter |14 pages

Politics of ‘good governance'

‘Otherising' governance in India

chapter |14 pages

Self and Other in the making of foreign policy

The terms of discourse in Indo-European relations

part |103 pages

Concepts in context

chapter |14 pages

The Chinese assimilation of ‘social class' 1

Intellectual discourses on jieji between 1899 and 1949

chapter |14 pages

Chinese dreams of socialism

Visions of a better future

chapter |12 pages

Democracy with Chinese characteristics

The primacy of the nation

chapter |14 pages

Renquan – Chinese human rights

An ‘import' from the West or a Chinese ‘export’?

chapter |13 pages

Soft power in China

Adaptation and development of a fashionable concept

chapter |10 pages

Hegemony in Chinese?

Ba in Chinese international relations