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Nationalism and Modernity: The Politics of Cultural Conservatism in Republican China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

EDMUND S. K. FUNG*
Affiliation:
University of Western Sydney E-mail: e.fung@uws.edu.au

Abstract

This article explores the political dynamics of modern Chinese cultural conservatism. It proceeds from the premise that modern Chinese conservatism, as distinct from traditionalism, was a response to modernity and, as such, a part of modernity. The article identifies the conservative with the nationalist, but not vice versa, and understands politico-cultural conservatism as politico-cultural nationalism. It will first trace the rise of modern Chinese conservative thought, revisit the ideas of two noted cultural conservatives Liang Shuming and Zhang Junmai, examine the politics of China-based cultural reconstruction, and then explore the conservative thought of the war period (1937–1945) to illustrate the interplay of war, culture and nationalism. It argues, basically, that although the conservatives did not defend the prevailing socio-political order as a whole, their understanding of politics from a cultural perspective was nuanced and that they stood in an ambiguous relationship with the existing regime and the party-state.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2008

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100 Chen Quan, ‘Fushide jingshen’ (The Faustian spirit), in Wen & Rui (eds.), Shidai zhi bo, pp. 359–367.

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104 In the 1940s, Liang Shuming and Zhang Junmai were particularly active in seeking to steer a course between the Scylla of the Nationalists and the Charybdis of the Communists. See Fung, In Search of Chinese Democracy, chapter 7.