An interesting article on China’s emerging political culture by Daniel A. Bell, professor of ethics and political philosophy at Tsinghua University, Beijing. A communitarian at heart, he has written perceptively about the so-called Asian values and against the universal pretensions of western liberalism. He is also the author of China’s New Confucianism: Politics and Everyday Life in a Changing Society.
Four decades ago, it would have been suicidal to say a good word about Confucius in Beijing. Confucius was the reactionary enemy, and all Chinese were encouraged to struggle against him. Chairman Mao himself was photographed on the cover of a revolutionary newspaper that announced the desecration of Confucius’s grave in Qufu. My own university was a hotbed of extreme leftism.
How times have changed. Today, the Chinese Communist Party approves a film about Confucius starring the handsome leading man Chow Yun-Fat. The master is depicted as an astute military commander and teacher of humane and progressive values, with a soft spot for female beauty. What does this say about China’s political future? Confucius bombed at the box office, leading many to think that the revival of Confucianism will go the same way as the anti-Confucius campaigns in the Cultural Revolution.
But perhaps it’s just a bad movie. Confucius received the kiss of death when it went head-to-head against the blockbuster Avatar. A vote for Confucius was seen as a vote against the heroic blue creatures from outer space. In the long term, however, Confucian revivalists may be on the right side of history.
More here. To get a better measure of the man, check out this 2008 video interview (17 minutes; the interviewer is a tad painful!).
UPDATE: Here are two more articles of related interest. One by Mark Lilla, One Set of Shoulders: China’s Hidden Revolution, and another by Perry Link, Waiting for WikiLeaks: Beijing’s Seven Secrets. Beneath Link’s article, read the comments by Jack Cameron (esp his second one), which I suspect Bell might agree with strongly. Also interesting is Stanford Encyclopedia’s entry on Communitarianism, written by Bell.



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