Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Defining modern Chinese culture
- 2 Social and political developments: the making of the twentieth-century Chinese state
- 3 Historical consciousness and national identity
- 4 Gender in modern Chinese culture
- 5 Ethnicity and Chinese identity: ethnographic insight and political positioning
- 6 Flag, flame and embers: diaspora cultures
- 7 Modernizing Confucianism and ‘new Confucianism’
- 8 Socialism in China: a historical overview
- 9 Chinese religious traditions from 1900-2005: an overview
- 10 Languages in a modernizing China
- 11 The revolutionary tradition in modern Chinese literature
- 12 The involutionary tradition in modern Chinese literature
- 13 Music and performing arts: tradition, reform and political and social relevance
- 14 Revolutions in vision: Chinese art and the experience of modernity
- 15 Cinema: from foreign import to global brand
- 16 Media boom and cyber culture: television and the Internet in China
- 17 Physical culture, sports and the Olympics
- Appendix
- Index
7 - Modernizing Confucianism and ‘new Confucianism’
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2009
- Frontmatter
- 1 Defining modern Chinese culture
- 2 Social and political developments: the making of the twentieth-century Chinese state
- 3 Historical consciousness and national identity
- 4 Gender in modern Chinese culture
- 5 Ethnicity and Chinese identity: ethnographic insight and political positioning
- 6 Flag, flame and embers: diaspora cultures
- 7 Modernizing Confucianism and ‘new Confucianism’
- 8 Socialism in China: a historical overview
- 9 Chinese religious traditions from 1900-2005: an overview
- 10 Languages in a modernizing China
- 11 The revolutionary tradition in modern Chinese literature
- 12 The involutionary tradition in modern Chinese literature
- 13 Music and performing arts: tradition, reform and political and social relevance
- 14 Revolutions in vision: Chinese art and the experience of modernity
- 15 Cinema: from foreign import to global brand
- 16 Media boom and cyber culture: television and the Internet in China
- 17 Physical culture, sports and the Olympics
- Appendix
- Index
Summary
For some people, Confucianism, a philosophy that looks to a mythical past as an ideal for inspiration, has become obsolete as societies historically under Confucian influence modernize. However, reports of the death of Confucianism are premature. While it has been eclipsed by Western thought and practice for significant periods, Confucianism has undergone a revival in many East Asian societies in the last few decades. Many people continue to identify Confucianism as the mainstream, even the definitive core, of Chinese culture. Confucianism has played many different, sometimes contradictory, roles in modernization, which is understood here as social progress through technological advancement, new modes of production, distribution and exchange for sustained economic growth, new social differentiation and rationalized organizations, increased social mobility, equality, and political participation in sovereign nation-states.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Modern Chinese Culture , pp. 135 - 154Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008
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