Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 328
Trim: 6⅛ x 9
978-1-4422-4791-8 • Hardback • August 2015 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4422-4792-5 • Paperback • August 2015 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
978-1-4422-4793-2 • eBook • August 2015 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
Jerusha McCormack is professor emeritus of English and American literature atUniversity College, Dublin.
John G. Blair is professor emeritus of American literature and civilization at the University of Geneva. For more than a decade, they have been teaching as Foreign Experts in the School of English and International Studies at Beijing Foreign Studies University.
Introduction: Entering a Chinese World
To the Reader
Part I: What Makes China Chinese? Ten Key Words
Chapter 1: Binding Families: Xiào孝
Chapter 2: Selves Located Through Others: Miànzi面子
Chapter 3: The People Network: Guānxi 关系
Chapter 4: Where’s My Mind? Xīn心
Chapter 5: The Energy Unifying the World: Qi气
Chapter 6: Chameleon Reality: Yì易
Chapter 7: Realizing a Way: Dào 道
Chapter 8: Thinking in Harmony: Hé 和
Chapter 9: The Lurking Threat of Chaos: Luàn 乱
Chapter 10: Strategizing Life: Cèlüè 策略
Part II: Western Questions, Chinese Responses
Chapter 11: Question One: Christianity?
Chapter 12: Question Two: Human Rights?
Chapter 13: Question Three: Democracy?
Chapter 14: Question Four: China Ruling the World?
Part III: Rethinking the West
Appendix: Glossing the Ten Chinese Characters
Acknowledgments
List of Works Cited
Index
About the Authors
This book is by two senior scholars of American and English literature and civilization who have spent over a decade teaching graduate students in Beijing and have supplemented their personal experiences with extensive reading in secondary studies on contemporary China in English. In part I, the heart of their book (ten chapters), they discuss ten words offered as keys to Chinese thinking today and yesteryear, accompanied by well-chosen examples. Emphasizing continuities in time and space within China and the West and concentrating on the differences between these two traditions, the authors are more sensitive to Western than to Chinese exceptions to their thoughtful and thought-provoking generalizations. Part II consists of four chapters, on Christianity, human rights, democracy, and Chinese views on China's place in the world. In the short, concluding Part III, ‘Rethinking the West,’ the authors urge readers to reconsider their own thinking. In sum, this is a welcome book—very 21st century—reflecting how attitudes have changed both within and beyond China and useful for considering the present situation.
— Choice Reviews
You get two fascinating books for the price of one in Thinking through China: a window for viewing many key dimensions of contemporary Chinese culture, and a mirror for viewing our own.
— Henry Rosemont, Jr., Brown University
Thinking through China is an enjoyable and informative introduction to key thought patterns in Chinese civilization. The work is filled with illuminating examples of cultural differences that should be of particular interest to Western readers who seek to learn more about what makes China tick.
— Daniel A. Bell, Tsinghua University; author of The China Model
In Thinking through China, Jerusha McCormack and John Blair draw upon their decades-long sojourn in a Chinese world to invite their readers to think with them through the most enduring values and customs of an antique China—a China whose rise in our own historical moment is changing the world. This capacious tour de force takes us down a portal to the other side of the looking glass to make penetrating comparisons between profoundly different ways of thinking and living and our own thick cultural assumptions, requiring of us nothing less than to struggle with imagination to break through the limits of our own common sense. Indeed, ‘we will know differently when we know more.’
— Roger T. Ames, University of Hawai'i
As someone who works with teachers through the National Consortium for Teaching About Asia, I can say that this is a fabulous resource. McCormack and Blair have spent years refining their ideas about the essential values underlying Chinese culture. Their goal has been to instruct Western students to better understand Chinese culture and its accompanying behaviors. Equally important has been their interest in teaching Chinese students to understand Western culture and the behavior of people from Western countries....Thinking through China is much more sophisticated, accessible, and valuable than most other books dealing with this topic.
— Diana Marston Wood, University of Pittsburgh
A Top 10 list of philosophers to help us make sense of the coronavirus crisis. #1: Lao Tzu. Covid-19 was first reported in China, so why not start there philosophically. Lao Tzu represents an ancient school of thought that promotes equanimity, embraces paradox and - in common with several other Asian faiths - emphasises life’s cyclical nature. Read: Thinking Through China by Jerusha McCormack and John G. Blair, an accessible introduction to Chinese philosophy and culture.
— Irish Times
Clearly defined structure allows access to complex ideas
Uses both text and images to illuminate comparisons
Written in an accessible and engaging style
Argues strongly for the divergence of Western thinking from that which distinguishes the Chinese world
Defines Chinese thinking in terms of ten Chinese key words and their cultural resonances
Approaches China through sustained Western comparisons
Seeks to balance Chinese and Western views in a non-judgmental fashion
Consistently multidisciplinary, treating China as a whole way of life
Reveals how Western styles of thinking block mutual recognition and hence constructive negotiation with China
Recommends pragmatism as best hope for collaborative responses to problems, including the climate crisis, the most profound challenge facing today’s world.
• Winner, Special Book Award of China (2021)