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Past and Present in China's Foreign Policy: From “Tribute System” to “Peaceful Rise”. Edited by John E. Wills Jr. Portland, ME: Merwin Asia, 2010. xxii + 134 pp. $35.00. ISBN 978-0-9836599-8-3

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 October 2012

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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2012 

The discussion of China's growing prominence in international life attracts increasing attention from publics, policy-makers and scholars alike. Usually side-lined by the mainstream, such interest towards China's roles and attitudes on the world stage has grown exponentially in the context of the deepening economic crisis across Europe and North America – the traditional locales of powers and influence in world politics. Indicative of the emergent weight and significance of non-Western actors on the global stage, the trend set by China seems to challenge the conventional frameworks of international relations.

In this setting, most commentators suggest a nascent “Sinicization” of global politics – seemingly confirmed by China's extensive involvement in the developing world. According to a number of commentators, backstopping this global drive (primarily for resources) are the perceived and actual aspirations of Beijing's external outlook. Thus, more often than not, the contention in the literature is that regardless of whether China chooses to develop a cooperative or conflictual stance, it will nevertheless have an important bearing on the patterns and practices of world affairs. This volume edited by John E. Wills, Jr. goes to the heart of this conversation. It suggests that the country's prominence in international life reflects both the transformations in, and the transformative potential of, Chinese foreign policy practice and perceptions.

In this respect, the collection makes a timely contribution to the discussion of this topic by scholars and observers of world politics. By bringing together some of the most prominent China hands in the field, Wills's edited volume not only tracks China's expanding global agenda, but also addresses some important gaps by providing much-needed contextual understanding of how China views and interprets the world. In fact, it is quite rare to encounter analyses as attentive to detail and method, yet as rigorously polemical as the ones included in this collection. By offering sophisticated macro-historical studies of Beijing's current international interactions, the contributions to this volume raise critical questions about China's foreign policy.

The point of departure for the volume is that the bifurcated view which tends to dominate the IR literature on China (by framing it as either a friend or a foe) should not blind observers to the nuances of what is ultimately a much more complex Chinese involvement in the patterns of global politics. Thus, a cornerstone of all contributions is the exploration of the historical evolution of the state China and how this process impacts on contemporary foreign policy. Peter C. Perdue is quite explicit when he states that “the imperial heritage remains a spectral presence” in Beijing's purview (p. 94). Wills elaborates this point further in his contribution:

From Han times, the Chinese built and often maintained a large single-centred polity, an empire, partly on a basis of military power, demographic weight, prosperity, and sophistication of written culture, but also on the basis of networks among individuals… Such a network-built empire rarely was in total control of its subjects, and did not elicit an all-consuming devotion and identification in the way a pseudo-kin “we-group” or a religion can. (p. 25)

One of the key legacies of such state-building experience, according to James L. Hevia is “to draw attention to the contingent, variegated, and intentionally constructed aspects of complex entities” such as China (p. 68). At the same time, Harry Harding cautions of the danger plaguing some commentators in trying “to draw too much [and uncritically] from the narratives of the past” in an attempt to glean insight into “China's approach to the twenty-first century – particularly from the dated narratives of a Sinocentric Asia and of national humiliation at the hands of the West – they may produce folly rather than wisdom” (p. 126). Heeding this warning, Alice Lyman Miller intimates that the cognitive grammars of historically informed exploration can actively and effectively contribute to recovering the emancipatory potential of scholarly observation. In particular, she suggests that the “use of China's past to elucidate its present and project its future might benefit from a healthy dose of self-reflection and self-knowledge” (p. 52). Taking this reflexivity seriously, Brantly Womack emphasizes that “sustainable leadership” in the complex patterns of global life – regardless of whether it is China's or anybody else's – is “not primarily a matter of preventing the rise of challengers, but reassuring other countries that the current order is in their interest” (p. 109). Echoing these sentiments, Michael D. Swaine elaborates that thoughtful policy analysts need to develop a “greater appreciation of both Chinese traditional social norms and relationships and rational calculation as they affect Chinese foreign policy behaviour, and also called for less emotional, less ideological, and more realistic interpretations of Chinese policies and actions” (p. 5).

In this way, the contributors' elucidations offer refreshing perspectives on the content, scope and implications of Beijing's external relations. The volume's thoughtful consideration of China's global roles provides a wealth of solid knowledge and perceptive insights on the evolution, patterns and practices of China's foreign policy. Thus, to the experts on China's international interactions, this collection edited by Wills offers both a comprehensive overview and a much-needed reconsideration of the conceptual and policy outlines of Beijing's nascent global agency. To the beginners, it makes available an accessible, yet rigorous, analytical and empirical engagement with the dynamics of Chinese foreign policy.