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Democracy of the Dead: Dewey, Confucius, and the Hope for Democracy in China

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The Democracy of the Dead challenges conventional thinking about China and its relations with the West.According to David Hall and Roger Ames, it is a mistake to assume that a future modernized China will also be essentially Westernized.

It is wrong to supposed that the only hope for enhanced rights and liberties for individual Chinese lies in the transformation of China into a liberal devocracy, complete with free enterprise capitalism and rational technologies.The China which may well come to dominate the global culture of the twenty-first century will not be a society of increasingly rugged individuals, nor will it be the Netscaped, McDonaldized theme park of which Western entrepreneurs have begun to dream.

China is likely to maintain far more of its traditional character than most Westerners now suspect possible, and will enter the modern world largely on its own terms.China is not so much a target as a source of the coming globalization.

We must therefore learn more about China in order better to discern the shape of our own future, and we need to become more prepared to entera conversation in which the terms will be set by China equally with ourselves.Accommodating the legitimate desires of the Chinese people will require the promotion of a communitarian form of democracy seriously at odds with the liberal democratic model which dominates Western democracies.

This will best be accomplished by appealing to the communitarian strain within our own tradition.

Professors Hall and Ames offer John Dewey's theory of democracy as a 'communicating community' as the vision best suited to engage the realities of Chinese social practice and to promote the realization of a Confucian democracy in China.

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£29.99
Product Details
Open Court
0812699386 / 9780812699388
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
320.951
19/11/2015
English
280 pages
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