Sinicizing international relations : [Book] : self, civilization, and intellectual politics in subaltern East Asia / Chih-yu Shih.
Material type: TextDescription: xii, 245 pages ; 23 cmISBN:- 9781137289445
- 327.5105
- 327.5105
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Junaid Zaidi Library, COMSATS University Islamabad 2nd Floor | 327.5105 SHI-S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 52150 |
Browsing Junaid Zaidi Library, COMSATS University Islamabad shelves, Shelving location: 2nd Floor Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
327.5105 BEI Beijing's power and China's borders twenty neighbors in Asia / | 327.5105 EME Emerging China prospects for partnership in Asia / | 327.5105 FRI-C A contest for supremacy China, America, and the struggle for mastery in Asia / | 327.5105 SHI-S Sinicizing international relations : self, civilization, and intellectual politics in subaltern East Asia / | 327.510609051 CHI China returns to Africa a rising power and a continent embrace / | 327.51073 ALI-U US-Chinese strategic triangles : examining Indo-Pacific insecurity / | 327.53049509021 BOB-C Building type basics for senior living |
Sinicizing International Relations brings civilizational politics back to the studies of international relations and questions the notion of a rising Chinese nation by deconstructing the possibility of looking at China in its entirety. The works of scholars writing on China are influenced by their own historical and philosophical backgrounds and the daily political and economic conditions in which they live and work. Their writings on China rising intrinsically reflect their encounters and choice. Studying the rise of China involves interactions between the identity of the observers who are doing the studying and the identities of China. Each set of interacting identities comprises choices on at least three levels: civilizational, national, and (sub)ethnic. As a result, intellectual choices of identity become intrinsic to international relations scholarship, and international relations acquire complicated cultural meanings in East Asian communities, which contemporary international relations theories fail to comprehend. .
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