Knowing China: A Twenty-First Century Guide

Author:   Frank N. Pieke (Universiteit Leiden)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781107132740


Pages:   232
Publication Date:   28 July 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Knowing China: A Twenty-First Century Guide


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Author:   Frank N. Pieke (Universiteit Leiden)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.80cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.460kg
ISBN:  

9781107132740


ISBN 10:   1107132746
Pages:   232
Publication Date:   28 July 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

'In an extraordinary double act, Frank Pieke reaches out to the China non-specialist and specialist alike. He provides the former with the most digestible account to date of China's unconventional ascendancy and forces China experts out of their academic enclaves into public world debate. His concept of neo-socialism makes sense of China's intriguing socio-cultural and politico-economic twists and turns that draw on its civilized past and aspirations and defy conventional Western analytical categories.' David Parkin, All Souls College, Univeristy of Oxford 'Engagingly written, the work reflects an impressive knowledge and understanding of contemporary China ... Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' J. A. Rhodes, Choice 'Pieke's argument draws on an understanding of China's premodern culture, with the 'mandate of heaven' - a kind of legitimacy gained by virtue of rulers' ability to create prosperity - now in the hands of the CCP. He paints a fascinating, counterintuitive picture of the CCP as a quasi-theological institution, and certainly one that has no intention of using the tactics familiar to liberal societies to reform.' Project Syndicate (www.project-syndicate.org)


'In an extraordinary double act, Frank Pieke reaches out to the China non-specialist and specialist alike. He provides the former with the most digestible account to date of China's unconventional ascendancy and forces China experts out of their academic enclaves into public world debate. His concept of neo-socialism makes sense of China's intriguing socio-cultural and politico-economic twists and turns that draw on its civilized past and aspirations and defy conventional Western analytical categories.' David Parkin, All Souls College, Univeristy of Oxford 'Engagingly written, the work reflects an impressive knowledge and understanding of contemporary China ... Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' J. A. Rhodes, Choice 'Pieke's argument draws on an understanding of China's premodern culture, with the 'mandate of heaven' - a kind of legitimacy gained by virtue of rulers' ability to create prosperity - now in the hands of the CCP. He paints a fascinating, counterintuitive picture of the CCP as a quasi-theological institution, and certainly one that has no intention of using the tactics familiar to liberal societies to reform.' Project Syndicate (www.project-syndicate.org) 'I find this book very interesting and well written. Its innovative concept of neo-socialism is very useful to capture the distinctiveness of contemporary China, which consists of an uneasy combination of different contradictory elements that defies any easy characterization. In addition, this book is very informative because Pieke has done an excellent job in synthesizing the findings in Chinese studies to answer such research questions as: why the communist party will not fall from power, why Chine's economy will continue to grow, but not forever, and why Chinese people have freedom without universal human rights. This, both general readers and area specialists will find this book indispensable for their in-depth understanding of contemporary China.' Alvin Y. So, Pacific Affairs 'In an extraordinary double act, Frank Pieke reaches out to the China non-specialist and specialist alike. He provides the former with the most digestible account to date of China's unconventional ascendancy and forces China experts out of their academic enclaves into public world debate. His concept of neo-socialism makes sense of China's intriguing socio-cultural and politico-economic twists and turns that draw on its civilized past and aspirations and defy conventional Western analytical categories.' David Parkin, All Souls College, Univeristy of Oxford 'Engagingly written, the work reflects an impressive knowledge and understanding of contemporary China ... Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' J. A. Rhodes, Choice 'Pieke's argument draws on an understanding of China's premodern culture, with the 'mandate of heaven' - a kind of legitimacy gained by virtue of rulers' ability to create prosperity - now in the hands of the CCP. He paints a fascinating, counterintuitive picture of the CCP as a quasi-theological institution, and certainly one that has no intention of using the tactics familiar to liberal societies to reform.' Project Syndicate (www.project-syndicate.org) 'I find this book very interesting and well written. Its innovative concept of neo-socialism is very useful to capture the distinctiveness of contemporary China, which consists of an uneasy combination of different contradictory elements that defies any easy characterization. In addition, this book is very informative because Pieke has done an excellent job in synthesizing the findings in Chinese studies to answer such research questions as: why the communist party will not fall from power, why Chine's economy will continue to grow, but not forever, and why Chinese people have freedom without universal human rights. This, both general readers and area specialists will find this book indispensable for their in-depth understanding of contemporary China.' Alvin Y. So, Pacific Affairs


'In an extraordinary double act, Frank Pieke reaches out to the China non-specialist and specialist alike. He provides the former with the most digestible account to date of China's unconventional ascendancy and forces China experts out of their academic enclaves into public world debate. His concept of neo-socialism makes sense of China's intriguing socio-cultural and politico-economic twists and turns that draw on its civilized past and aspirations and defy conventional Western analytical categories.' David Parkin, All Souls College, Univeristy of Oxford 'Engagingly written, the work reflects an impressive knowledge and understanding of contemporary China ... Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' J. A. Rhodes, Choice 'Pieke's argument draws on an understanding of China's premodern culture, with the 'mandate of heaven' - a kind of legitimacy gained by virtue of rulers' ability to create prosperity - now in the hands of the CCP. He paints a fascinating, counterintuitive picture of the CCP as a quasi-theological institution, and certainly one that has no intention of using the tactics familiar to liberal societies to reform.' Project Syndicate (www.project-syndicate.org) 'I find this book very interesting and well written. Its innovative concept of neo-socialism is very useful to capture the distinctiveness of contemporary China, which consists of an uneasy combination of different contradictory elements that defies any easy characterization. In addition, this book is very informative because Pieke has done an excellent job in synthesizing the findings in Chinese studies to answer such research questions as: why the communist party will not fall from power, why Chine's economy will continue to grow, but not forever, and why Chinese people have freedom without universal human rights. This, both general readers and area specialists will find this book indispensable for their in-depth understanding of contemporary China.' Alvin Y. So, Pacific Affairs `In an extraordinary double act, Frank Pieke reaches out to the China non-specialist and specialist alike. He provides the former with the most digestible account to date of China's unconventional ascendancy and forces China experts out of their academic enclaves into public world debate. His concept of neo-socialism makes sense of China's intriguing socio-cultural and politico-economic twists and turns that draw on its civilized past and aspirations and defy conventional Western analytical categories.' David Parkin, All Souls College, Univeristy of Oxford 'Engagingly written, the work reflects an impressive knowledge and understanding of contemporary China ... Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' J. A. Rhodes, Choice 'Pieke's argument draws on an understanding of China's premodern culture, with the 'mandate of heaven' - a kind of legitimacy gained by virtue of rulers' ability to create prosperity - now in the hands of the CCP. He paints a fascinating, counterintuitive picture of the CCP as a quasi-theological institution, and certainly one that has no intention of using the tactics familiar to liberal societies to reform.' Project Syndicate (www.project-syndicate.org) 'I find this book very interesting and well written. Its innovative concept of neo-socialism is very useful to capture the distinctiveness of contemporary China, which consists of an uneasy combination of different contradictory elements that defies any easy characterization. In addition, this book is very informative because Pieke has done an excellent job in synthesizing the findings in Chinese studies to answer such research questions as: why the communist party will not fall from power, why Chine's economy will continue to grow, but not forever, and why Chinese people have freedom without universal human rights. This, both general readers and area specialists will find this book indispensable for their in-depth understanding of contemporary China.' Alvin Y. So, Pacific Affairs


Author Information

Frank Pieke studied cultural anthropology at the University of Amsterdam and the University of California, Berkeley. After lectureships at Universiteit Leiden and the University of Oxford, he was appointed Chair Professor in Modern China Studies at Universiteit Leiden in 2010. Pieke's current research revolves around foreign migration to China and the changing role of the Chinese Communist Party. His books include The Good Communist: Elite Training and State Building in Today's China (2009) and Transnational Chinese: Fujianese Migrants in Europe (2004).

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