The 158th Nichibunken Lecture "Revisiting the Chinese World Order: Soft Power or the Imperialism of Nation-states" by Prasenjit Duara

Eri Shiraishi Discussion

Date: Thursday, 27 June 2019

Time: 3:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.

Venue: Seminar Room 1, International Research Center for Japanese Studies (Nichibunken)
       3-2 Goryo Oeyama-cho, Nishikyo-ku, Kyoto 610-1192 Japan

Lecturer: Prasenjit Duara (Professor, Duke University/ President of Association for Asian Studies)

Commentators: Zhong Yijiang (Visiting Associate Professor, Nichibunken/ Associate professor, University of Tokyo)
                          Inaga Shigemi (Professor, Nichibunken)

Moderator: Kusunoki Ayako (Associate professor, Nichibunken)

Language: English

*Admission free, and no reservation required.

http://research.nichibun.ac.jp/pc1/ja/events/archives/lecture/cal/2019/6/27/

Abstract:
There are unexpected convergences between the imperial Chinese order and the emergent global order. The historical evolution of forms of global domination since the end of the 19th century saw modern imperialism succeeded by what I have called ‘the imperialism of nation-states’ which represented the principal form of domination among states during much of the 20th century and in some form also through the Cold War. Despite continued warfare conducted by the US and other states, post-Cold War geopolitical dominance is said to be shaped by the pull of ‘soft power.’ While soft power is an inadequate concept, it suggests a new balance between expressions of violent power and other modes of domination, including debt. I will examine the extent to which this notion—which is popular in the Chinese media-- has any purchase in understanding the rise of China.