Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Roots of Contemporary China
2. Chinese Family
3. Population and Development
4. Status of Chinese Women
5. Globalization and Chinese Women
6. Chinese Economy
7. China’ Rise and Environmental Degradation
8. Chinese Political System
9. Rampant Corruption and Chinese Political System
10. Traditional Chinese Religions
11. Chinese Christianity in the Post-Mao Era
12. Will Confucianism Be Able to Help China’s Democratization?
13. Marxism and Maoism
14. Media in China: Internet and Chinese Cinema
15. U.S.-China Relations
16. Does China’s Rise Threaten the United States?
17. Finding Common Ground for Chinese and Western Perspectives
18. Future of China: Undemocratic China Cannot Rule the World
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Jinghao Zhou is associate professor at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, New York. He is the author of three books: China’s Peaceful Rise in a Global Context: A Domestic Aspect of China’s Road Map to Democratization (Lexington Books, 2010, paperback edition, 2012), Remaking China’s Public Philosophy and Chinese Women’s Liberation: The Volatile Mixing of Confucianism, Marxism, and Feminism (Edwin Mellen Press, 2006), Remaking China’s Public Philosophy for the Twenty-first Century (Praeger Publishers, 2003). His thirty plus articles in English appear in various journals and newspapers, such as The Journal of Comparative Asian Development, American Journal of Chinese Studies, Journal of China: An International Journal, Asian Mission, Asian Perspective, Journal of International Women’s Studies, Journal of Religion and Society, In the National Interests, Journal of Church and State, International Journal of China Studies, China Review International, and Asia Times. He has also published more than forty articles in Chinese journals and newspapers.
Aiming to deconstruct several myths about contemporary China and
assist foreign policy experts engaging with Beijing, Zhou provides
an overview of the country's long history and its current problems
for a foreign readership. An admirable departure from
ultra-nationalist apologies, the book offers a refreshingly
balanced discussion of political repression, gender equality,
environmental degradation, and human rights issues related to
explosive capitalism. Zhou also disproves the fear-based theory
that China's development and growth are direct threats to the US,
and repeatedly asserts that China's future prosperity depends on
thorough political reform. . . .Zhou clearly writes with students
in mind; his book addresses nearly every topic that students hunger
to understand. Specific chapters could be assigned in virtually any
class, and his book would work wonderfully in political science,
international relations, and public policy library collections.
Students writing research papers in these fields will find many
citations to relevant scholarship. Summing Up: Highly recommended.
Especially for undergraduate and professional readers.
*CHOICE*
Jinghao Zhou asks important questions in his attempt at
“Understanding Contemporary China,” as his book’s sub-title states.
As a result of grappling with big issues, his work provides a good
text for an introductory course on contemporary Chinese
politics.
*Journal of Chinese Political Science*
Chinese vs. Western Perspectives: Understanding Contemporary China
is a wonderful insider look from outside China. Unlike most Western
scholars writing about China, Jinghao Zhou lived in China for the
most part of his adult life and knows the Chinese culture and
politics intimately. After teaching and living in the U.S. for many
years, he is also able to see China from a distance. As a result,
he has a unique perspective on China. His book represents one of
the best scholarship in the field.
*Dongping Han, Warren Wilson College*
The book provides a comprehensive and insightful narrative of the
multifaceted stories of contemporary China. Its examination of the
paradoxes and dilemmas of the Chinese experience, placed within a
historical context as well as an analytical framework, is a
valuable addition to the existing literature in the field of China
Studies.
*Sun Yi, University of San Diego*
Zhou’s ambitious book covers a broad range of topics that can help
readers unfamiliar with China recognize the wide array of complex
issues that have shaped contemporary Chinese society, culture,
politics, and economics. While covering immense historical periods
and cultural traditions, he synthesizes both Chinese and Western
academic perspectives from many disciplines into a very readable
book.
*Eriberto P. Lozada, Davidson College*
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