Equ(al)ity and Community in China after Forty Years of Economic Reform

We suggest a methodology that combines a refined conceptual approach with a theoretically-inspired empirical assessment, to analyse how Sinicised Marxist theory as well as practice has invariably emphasised Marx’s philosophy of history, rather than any version of Marxist egalitarian political philos...

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Main Authors: Alessia A. AMIGHINI, Peitao JIA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts) 2019-01-01
Series:Asian Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/as/article/view/8035
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spelling doaj-6dd4aed0a2304ab4bfe9853dc87634062021-03-02T01:52:21ZengZnanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts)Asian Studies2232-51312350-42262019-01-017126929010.4312/as.2019.7.1.269-2908035Equ(al)ity and Community in China after Forty Years of Economic ReformAlessia A. AMIGHINI0Peitao JIA1Università del Piemonte OrientaleShandong UniversityWe suggest a methodology that combines a refined conceptual approach with a theoretically-inspired empirical assessment, to analyse how Sinicised Marxist theory as well as practice has invariably emphasised Marx’s philosophy of history, rather than any version of Marxist egalitarian political philosophy, and therefore developed a culturally distinctive version of Marxism as totalitarian and subsequently authoritarian (rather than democratic) socialism. We argue that Chinese socialism has appropriated and applied socialist ideals to China’s post-cultural-revolution development into an economic reform agenda without political transition. We suggest that China today runs an ethically and politically problematic regime under which the people enjoy neither sufficient social justice nor decent community values. Such lack of equality and community represents a major inherent contradiction of “socialism with Chinese characteristics,” which has to accept and even accommodate increasing inequality to drive future growth. This contradiction also makes the so-called Chinese Dream more one of national aggregate prosperity than a dream for the Chinese people.https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/as/article/view/8035Socialism with Chinese characteristicsSinicized MarxismEqualitySocial JusticeCommunity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alessia A. AMIGHINI
Peitao JIA
spellingShingle Alessia A. AMIGHINI
Peitao JIA
Equ(al)ity and Community in China after Forty Years of Economic Reform
Asian Studies
Socialism with Chinese characteristics
Sinicized Marxism
Equality
Social Justice
Community
author_facet Alessia A. AMIGHINI
Peitao JIA
author_sort Alessia A. AMIGHINI
title Equ(al)ity and Community in China after Forty Years of Economic Reform
title_short Equ(al)ity and Community in China after Forty Years of Economic Reform
title_full Equ(al)ity and Community in China after Forty Years of Economic Reform
title_fullStr Equ(al)ity and Community in China after Forty Years of Economic Reform
title_full_unstemmed Equ(al)ity and Community in China after Forty Years of Economic Reform
title_sort equ(al)ity and community in china after forty years of economic reform
publisher Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts)
series Asian Studies
issn 2232-5131
2350-4226
publishDate 2019-01-01
description We suggest a methodology that combines a refined conceptual approach with a theoretically-inspired empirical assessment, to analyse how Sinicised Marxist theory as well as practice has invariably emphasised Marx’s philosophy of history, rather than any version of Marxist egalitarian political philosophy, and therefore developed a culturally distinctive version of Marxism as totalitarian and subsequently authoritarian (rather than democratic) socialism. We argue that Chinese socialism has appropriated and applied socialist ideals to China’s post-cultural-revolution development into an economic reform agenda without political transition. We suggest that China today runs an ethically and politically problematic regime under which the people enjoy neither sufficient social justice nor decent community values. Such lack of equality and community represents a major inherent contradiction of “socialism with Chinese characteristics,” which has to accept and even accommodate increasing inequality to drive future growth. This contradiction also makes the so-called Chinese Dream more one of national aggregate prosperity than a dream for the Chinese people.
topic Socialism with Chinese characteristics
Sinicized Marxism
Equality
Social Justice
Community
url https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/as/article/view/8035
work_keys_str_mv AT alessiaaamighini equalityandcommunityinchinaafterfortyyearsofeconomicreform
AT peitaojia equalityandcommunityinchinaafterfortyyearsofeconomicreform
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