
Contents
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Thinking about America in the Interwar Period Thinking about America in the Interwar Period
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Democracy Theory in the Republican Period Democracy Theory in the Republican Period
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The Interwar Period The Interwar Period
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Mao and the Malleability of America Mao and the Malleability of America
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The Revival of Hegemony Discourse The Revival of Hegemony Discourse
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Six Key Themes Six Key Themes
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5 Postimperial China in an American World
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Published:July 2015
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Abstract
This chapter continues to recount the historical view of the United States by Chinese elites, covering the twentieth century through the death of Mao Zedong in 1976. It presents the recurring patterns in how Chinese elites and political thinkers such as Liang Qichao viewed Western political systems, and how these patterns led to the belief that China had entirely different values than the United States under Sun Yat-sen and Chiang Kai-shek, there were arguments for and against Westernization, as well as for cultural fusion. As the Chinese Communist Party began to develop, Mao derided the American system of democracy, presenting it as a false version of freedom and his “New Democracy” as the ideal.
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