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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Revisiting “Socialism” and “Capitalism” in Contemporary Chinese
  and American Political Discourse What do these terms mean in each respect
 ive socio-political context\, and what do they portend for the future of U
 .S.-China Relations? To Tea-Party followers\, “Obama Care” is socialist as
  is big government and government intervention generally. In China rampant
  capital accumulation falls under the label of “capitalism with Chinese ch
 aracteristics”\, an ambiguous amalgam distinguished from its American coun
 terpart\, by the controlling role of the Party-State in maximizing consume
 rism without ceding “rights” to the denizens of the marketplace. What do t
 hese “mixed metaphors” represent\, and how is their expression: 1)a reflec
 tion of the remnants of past ideological conflicts that appeal to audience
 s in both countries old enough to retain links to anti-capitalist or anti-
 socialist rhetoric\, 2)reliant on educational sources and practices that r
 einforce and reiterate anti-socialist or anti-Capitalist ideologies 3)a co
 nsequence of unquestioned assumptions and half-truths propagated by the me
 dia 4)informed by encounters between Chinese and American ideologues encou
 ntered by Chinese and American students and scholars studying in the Unite
 d States and China\, 5)or some combination of all of the above Once we’ve 
 identified what these terms mean and how they operate\, what are the impli
 cations for the future of U.S.-China relations? Is it possible to get beyo
 nd the ideological and conventional cold war labels? What demographic and 
 socio-political factors keep them in play? And\, what would it take to dis
 place them? Participants: Qian Zhen\, Associate Professor\, Central Party 
 School in China Li Shundong\, Professor\, Shenxi Normal School
DTEND:20110429T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260418T185618Z
DTSTART:20110429T000000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:East Asia Program presents: Cross-Cultural Comparison Seminar Serie
 s I: China vs the U.S.
UID:RFCALITEM639121209782290115
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Revisiting “Socialism” and “Capitalism” in Con
 temporary Chinese and American Political Discourse What do these terms mea
 n in each respective socio-political context\, and what do they portend fo
 r the future of U.S.-China Relations? To Tea-Party followers\, “Obama Care
 ” is socialist as is big government and government intervention generally.
  In China rampant capital accumulation falls under the label of “capitalis
 m with Chinese characteristics”\, an ambiguous amalgam distinguished from 
 its American counterpart\, by the controlling role of the Party-State in m
 aximizing consumerism without ceding “rights” to the denizens of the marke
 tplace. What do these “mixed metaphors” represent\, and how is their expre
 ssion: 1)a reflection of the remnants of past ideological conflicts that a
 ppeal to audiences in both countries old enough to retain links to anti-ca
 pitalist or anti-socialist rhetoric\, 2)reliant on educational sources and
  practices that reinforce and reiterate anti-socialist or anti-Capitalist 
 ideologies 3)a consequence of unquestioned assumptions and half-truths pro
 pagated by the media 4)informed by encounters between Chinese and American
  ideologues encountered by Chinese and American students and scholars stud
 ying in the United States and China\, 5)or some combination of all of the 
 above Once we’ve identified what these terms mean and how they operate\, w
 hat are the implications for the future of U.S.-China relations? Is it pos
 sible to get beyond the ideological and conventional cold war labels? What
  demographic and socio-political factors keep them in play? And\, what wou
 ld it take to displace them? Participants: Qian Zhen\, Associate Professor
 \, Central Party School in China Li Shundong\, Professor\, Shenxi Normal S
 chool
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