Asian voice: Wang Gungwu (East Asia Forum Oct 9, 2020)

Against the backdrop of the current tension between China and the United States, Wang Gungwu’s contribution to mutual understanding between East and West is more essential now than ever.

Wang Gungwu is among the most prominent China scholars in modern times. Born 90 years ago, on 9 October 1930, into a Chinese family living in Surabaya, Indonesia, Wang grew up in Malaysia, was educated in Singapore and the United Kingdom, and had an illustrious academic career in Malaysia, Australia, Hong Kong and Singapore. One can imagine how such diverse cultural experiences influenced him as a person and scholar.

Image source: ANU events https://www.anu.edu.au/events/china-and-eurasia-how-much-does-the-past-matter

His great intellectual contribution is to the conceptualisation of the sophisticated relationship between China and the world. His work has earned him the title Junzi: Confucian gentleman, or scholar-gentleman. Drawing on his rich life experience, his deep understanding for different cultures and civilisations, his intellectual imagination and his passion for harmony between China and the world, Wang has brought closer together two distinct and, at times, seemingly irreconcilable worlds.

An overarching theme in Wang’s work is the concept of ‘Chineseness’. Wang delved into the changing nature of Chineseness from both a domestic and international perspective.

As a civilisation state, China has undergone continuous and dramatic change. Foremost a historian, Wang has studied China’s three rises: the Qin–Han, Tang–Song and Ming–Qing. Each rise brought significant changes to many aspects of dynastic politics. Wang’s interest then turned to the evolution of Chineseness in China’s modern history. After the intrusion of Western powers, the country underwent rapid and radical, even paradigmatic, changes. Throughout Wang’s career, debate has raged among Chinese and Western intellectuals on modernisation and Westernisation, which many regarded as synonymous.

While Wang acknowledged the significant shifts introduced by the West, he emphasised that, in the context of a rise in nationalism and a revival of Confucianism, China remains China. Modernisation has not turned China into a ‘Western-type’ power as many may have anticipated. Wang shows that Confucianism has endured through history, regardless of era, regime or crisis. The May Fourth Movement and the rise of Communism also could not dispel Confucianism.

On the international level, Wang wedded Chineseness to the context of Tianxia (all under heaven). More than 50 years ago, Wang first attracted international attention with an essay on Ming relations with Southeast Asia in The Chinese World Order: Traditional China’s Foreign Relations, edited by John Fairbank. It laid out the normative underpinnings and practices of the imperial tribute system, with Tianxia being its organising principle.

For Wang, central to all the issues related to China’s behaviour on the international stage today is whether it intends to impose a modern tribute system on the world. China is neither the creator of a new world order, nor is it an upholder of the existing American-led order. Instead, Wang argues that a fundamental aspect of Chineseness is the belief that everything changes; the only thing that remains unchanging is the notion of change itself.

From this perspective, the current system is destined to change. The current international order is not the international order, but rather a product of the values and interests of the Second World War’s victors. China accepts those elements of the world order that align with its own interests, but not the system as unchanging. Today’s rules, norms and institutions are neither universal nor permanent and China is neither a revisionist nor a status quo power.

This does not mean China is fated for the so-called ‘Thucydides Trap’ — or that a military confrontation between an established and a rising power is likely. Speaking from a perspective of Chineseness, Wang argues that accommodation is possible and a civilisational clash is not inevitable. First, China’s history suggests that it is a different kind of actor from other imperial powers; its aspirations are distinct from those of the United States. China’s phase of expansion ended long ago and it has not demonstrated a will for regional or global dominance through spreading its political system or rule over other sovereign nations. Second, and more fundamentally, Chineseness itself does point to an inherent respect for humanity and human dignity and the accommodation of cultural diversity.

Any danger that China poses is not in a ‘revival’ of the Middle Kingdom and a hierarchical tribute system, but rather that it could emulate imperial Japan’s behaviour, or that of the United States. If China comes to mimic or share their conceptions, then a clash is indeed conceivable. The source of the problem would be not Chineseness but the opposite: ‘un-Chineseness’.

Against the backdrop of the current tension between China and the United States, Wang Gungwu’s contribution to mutual understanding between East and West is more essential now than ever.

Zheng Yongnian is Director of the Advanced Institute for Global and Contemporary China Studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), Shenzhen.

This essay is part of an EAF series, Asian Voicescelebrating the contribution of great Asian intellectuals and thinkers to the understanding of the region. This essay is the second of two published today on the occasion of Emeritus Professor Wang Gungwu’s ninetieth birthday.

Wang Gungwu AO CBE is University Professor at the National University of Singapore (NUS) and Emeritus Professor at the Australian National University.

Comments

3 responses to “Asian voice: Wang Gungwu (East Asia Forum Oct 9, 2020)”

  1. Michael in China Avatar
    Michael in China

    I am not sure these writings and theories will assuage the hawkish thinking on the other side in the USA or Australia but it is good to put them out there just as it is good to start from a position of understanding the cultures and thinking are different so let’s accept (and respect) that and look for solutions from that point. What I do know is that seeking to suppress or exclude China from international forums or industry standards is not sensible let alone reasonable and will cause conflict.

  2. Dr Ka Sing Chua Avatar
    Dr Ka Sing Chua

    “Speaking from a perspective of Chineseness, Wang argues that accommodation is possible and a civilisational clash is not inevitable. First, China’s history suggests that it is a different kind of actor from other imperial powers; its aspirations are distinct from those of the United States. China’s phase of expansion ended long ago and it has not demonstrated a will for regional or global dominance through spreading its political system or rule over other sovereign nations. Second, and more fundamentally, Chineseness itself does point to an inherent respect for humanity and human dignity and the accommodation of cultural diversity.” Beautifully stated.

    This is the voice of all people of Chinese around the world including China. Even communism will not change it. On the contrary, communism and CCP in China has to accommodate Confucianism and eventually I predict the social ideology for Chinese society will be a combination of Confucianism, socialism and so called universal values of advance Western society picking the best out of these human evolutionary experience and changes for the better.

    Authoritarian capitalism and communism will be discarded and replaced by the above I mentioned. The proof comes from millions of many foreigners from different part of the world who have toured, worked and lived and experiencing living in modern China last 40 years. The changes are coming but all takes time. I believe It is the Chineseness that changes it. We overseas Chinese have brought that Chineseness beyond borders to wherever people of Chinese origin settled in different part of the world including Australia. Professor Wang is one of the the best examples.

    Don’t blame CCP for it. It is only an excuse for the “authoritarian Capitalist regimes” like USA who is jealous of the achievement of modern China or any other nation which can challenge their system that they have to use force for regime changes. Examples are aplenty even in recent history. So don’t scapegoating and blaming overseas Chinese either for the problem you have in your own country. This is my humble opinion.

  3. Anthony Pun Avatar
    Anthony Pun

    Happy 90th Birthday to an old friend who mentored us through the difficulty period ikn the 1980s when racism raised its ugly head in Australia beginning with the remarks of Prof Blainey – that incident sparked the formation of teh Australian Chinese Forum under James Lee. Prof Wang is correct to point out the subtle diffrrence in Chinese political culture and many conflicts with the West are derived from a lack of understanding of the history and culture of the “Han”ivilization. Unforturnately most Westerners are reluctant to seek such knowledge because of complacency or is bias against it.