Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 272
Trim: 6½ x 9¾
978-0-7425-6721-4 • Hardback • July 2010 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-0-7425-6722-1 • Paperback • July 2010 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
978-0-7425-6723-8 • eBook • July 2010 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Brantly Womack is Cumming Memorial Professor of Foreign Affairs at the University of Virginia.
Introduction
Brantly Womack
Part I: China and the World Order: Dilemmas of Identity
Chapter 1: China and the World: From Tribute to Treaties to Popular Nationalism
Joseph W. Esherick
Chapter 2: On China's Rise
Lowell Dittmer
Part II: Challenges of Strategy and Security
Chapter 3: Chinese Strategy and Security Issues in Historical Perspective
Evelyn S. Rawski
Chapter 4: China's Strategy and Security in the Post–Cold War Era
Michael D. Swaine
Part III: China's Economic Trajectory
Chapter 5: China's Prereform Economy in World Perspective
Dwight H. Perkins
Chapter 6: The Dynamics of China's Reform-Era Economy
Barry Naughton
Part IV: China's Ecological and Resource Interaction
Chapter 7: The Environmental Impasse in Late Imperial China
Mark Elvin
Chapter 8: China's Energy Rise
Erica S. Downs
Part V: Political Creativity and Political Development
Chapter 9: The Political Creativity of Late Imperial China
R. Keith Schoppa
Chapter 10: Political Creativity and Political Reform in China?
Joseph Fewsmith
Part VI: Concluding Reflections
Chapter 11: Struggle for Identity: A Political Psychology of China's Rise
Qin Yaqing
A major step forward in the accurate understanding of China in the attempt to understand its internal dynamic. . . . This book will inform both the average reader and the academic about the rise of China, and above all, its identity reconstruction.
— Journal of Chinese Political Science
Stimulating and elegant. This unique book purposefully blends insightful historical analyses and strong present-day commentaries, placing core elements of the phenomenon of contemporary China into very meaningful contexts. This welcome and long-overdue approach will assist a broad readership that seeks to understand both where China has been and where it is going.
— Robert A. Kapp, former president, US-China Business Council
China and the United States are bound to have issues and confrontation. We will also have synergies, collaboration, and cooperation. In China's Rise, Brantly Womack has compiled the most useful set of perspectives in the last decade on how to think about China. The contributors to this book are not only among the best observers and analysts of China's actions but also some of the best writers in the field. They have given us a guide to understanding that is not only immensely interesting to a broad group of readers trying to understand modern China but also eminently useful to those who deal in the U.S.-China relationship in any serious way.
— Admiral Joseph W. Prueher, former ambassador to China and commander-in-chief, U.S. Pacific Command
Presents a China-centered perspective on China's rise
Treats China's rise comprehensively, not just focusing on politics or economics
Considers China's rise in depth, going back thousands of years and forward to new challenges on the horizon
Combines the expertise of historians and social scientists
Authored by leading scholars, all noted in their fields
Written in accessible and engaging style