Chinese Encounters Western Theories, A Special Issue. From Shanghai Modern to Shanghai Postmodern: A Cosmopolitan View of China’s Modernization. Globalisation as Glocalisation in China: A New Perspective. Multiplied Modernities and Modernisms? Literature Compass 9 (9): 617–622. Translated Modernities: Literary and Cultural Perspectives on Globalization and China. Journal of Chinese Philosophy 37 (1): 48–62. Reconstructing (Neo) Confucianism in ‘Glocal’ Postmodern Culture Context. The Transnational State and the BRICS: A Global Capitalism Perspective. Public lecture, Tsinghua University, November 26, 2002. Qian Zhongwen wenji (Selected Essays of Qian Zhongwen). Edited and with an Introduction by John E. To Strive to Build China into a Great Socialist Country” (wei jianshe yige weida de shehuizhuyi guojia er fendou). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ![]() The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge. A Singular Modernity: Essay on the Ontology of the Present. Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ![]() In The Oxford Handbook of Global Modernisms, eds. Chinese Modernism, Mimetic Desire, and European Time. China and Globalization: The Social, Economic, and Political Transformation of Chinese Society, 3rd ed. Kaifeng: Henan University Press.Įagleton, Terry. Durham: Duke University Press.Ĭhen, Xiaoming. ![]() Five Faces of Modernity: Modernism, Avant-Garde, Decadence, Kitsch, Postmodernism. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Ĭalinescu, Matei. Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization. To the author, in the global era, modernity has taken on a new look, which is of different forms in different regions and which will contribute to global modernity.Īppadurai, Arjun. The author also tries to offer his reconstruction of globalization with regard to its “glocalized” practices in China, mainly from a cultural and intellectual perspective. The impact of globalization on Chinese culture manifests itself in the following aspects: (1) it helped form a sort of Chinese modernity, or a sort of alternative modernity (2) the popularization of Neo-Confucianism in the current era and (3) the “Belt and Road” initiative and the building up of a community of shared future for mankind. The same is true of modernity in China, which could be viewed as an alternative modernity or modernities with Chinese characteristics. So China’s globalization practice is a sort of “glocalization”. In this chapter, the author first reconstructs the concept of globalization from seven aspects: (1) Globalization as a way of global economic operation, (2) as a historical process, (3) as a process of financial marketization and political democratization, (4) as a critical concept, (5) as a narrative category, (6) as a cultural construction and reconstruction, and (7) as a theoretic discourse.
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