Following the heated debate on ‘the rise of China’, we are also witnessing a rise of Chinese Nationalism. While old Chinese Nationalism between 1840-1949 was to a great extent a legitimate response to foreign aggression and popular aspirations for national independence, this New Chinese Nationalism is entirely different.
The first well known Chinese Nationalist in the 1990’s is He Xin, who was allowed to put out anti-Western books in the early nineties, against the background of the post-Tiananmen crackdown and the subsequent sanctions imposed by the West. What is worth noting is not He Xin’s nationalist response to the hostility of the West at the time, but rather the fact that little debate was stimulated by his book. Even after the US stopped and searched the Chinese ship The Milky Way in international waters, little public protest could be heard. When in 1996 the nationalist Wang Xiaodong put out the book China Can Say No targeting the US as the chief enemy, there was some sensation, but this soon died down. It was not until May 1999 when the US bombed the Chinese Embassy in Yugoslavia, triggering off massive anti-US protests , that nationalism definitely made a come back. I define this as the New Chinese Nationalism. It is both a response by the ruling elite and important parts of the intellectuals to internal and external problems, aroused during the course of re-integration with global capitalism, and also advocates to modernizing China via strengthening the one-party state. The ultimate purpose of New Chinese Nationalism is the re-building of the glory of the past great China Empire, thus the propaganda on ‘the rise of China’ [1]. It does not contain anything progressive.
Zheng Yongnian of the National University of Singapore, in his book Globalization and State Transformation in China, argues that the revival of nationalism springs from the new needs of the CCP:
“In the post-Mao era, the search for political legitimacy has replaced the foreign threat and has become the primary factor underpinning the revival of Chinese nationalism. In other words, the main sources for nationalism in the post-Mao era are domestic rather than external.” [2]
Elsewhere he elaborates what he means by ‘the search for political legitimacy’:
“Nationalism has been used by the Chinese Communist Party as a response to the decline in Maoist faith, and nationalism is ready to become another vision of the CCP ideology.” [3]
Zheng’s dichotomy of domestic/external is not entirely satisfactory. Yet his contention that the CCP’s needs nationalism for its new source of legitimacy is correct. In place of a vision of a world communism with China occupying the leading role (a vision which had become obsolete by the early 1980’s), the project of building a great Chinese Nation and recovering the leading position it enjoyed until 1840 seems more plausible. Moreover, it is in the interest of the one-party state to divert popular discontent, such as the 1989 democratic movement, to external enemies. Hence the CCP began to change course on the issue of nationalism, and in practice encourage its re-awakening. The CCP’s previous position on nationalism was to condemn it as the ‘bourgeoisie’s viewpoint on nations’. [4] As a matter of fact, there has always been an element of nationalism in its policies on ethnic minorities, public education and cultural program through out its rule-however they are packaged as patriotism. Yet it has not explicitly endorsed nationalism, let alone allow openly nationalist writings to be published. The policy began to change in the 1980’s, when the CCP gradually opted for a full-scale embrace of global capitalism.
The CCP may loosen control over part of the economy, even the financial sector, to private business and foreign capital, but it is not going to loosen control over production and distribution of information, because it does not want to concede power over what and how people think. When basically all publishing houses, media, and film companies etc are still in state’s hands, and have not affected by the great wave of privatization, what the CCP allows or forbids to appear in public is paramount in the shaping of ‘public opinion’ and debate. No book is ever published, no film is ever made, without prior approval from the Party. It is here that the state’s position or ‘taste’ becomes crucial. All dissident voices have been severely censored ---- democratic appeals, labor advocacy, and even mild critiques of environmental policy.. Conversely, the Party allows the production and wide distribution of nationalist works in all areas. For the past ten years we have seen book after book and TV program after program glorifying past great Emperors, advocating Chinese Chauvinism and Anti-Western thinking, or even outright Social Darwinism and fascism. Between 2004 and 2006, a state publisher printed 900,000 copies of the novel Wolves Totem, that tells the story of the fierce and vigorous Mongolian Wolves. Fearing readers might not understand him, the author wrote a long postscript to tell readers his motive. According to him, the Chinese must learn from the Mongolian Wolves in order to survive in the jungle of globalization; that Chinese Civilization was once so great was only because it had, for thousands of years, absorbed the culture of wolves worships of northern nomads, which helped the elites to maintain a great empire. This is outright Social Darwinism and Chinese Messianism. Though this book was published in a personal capacity, the CCP cannot evade its fair share of responsibility, nor can it defend itself by referring to the principle of free speech, for there is no such thing in China.
In the 1980’s, themes of TV programs and books were often dominated by a deep sense of national inferiority, fear of being marginalized in global competition, [5] and a yearning for social reform. The mood has radically changed since the middle of 1990’s, when the CCP became confident that the West could not resist the temptation of the huge Chinese market, and that Western governments and capitalists were ready to forgive the 1989 crackdown in order to have a share of that market. The fact that China has been able to avoid the miserable fate of Soviet Union, and in contrast she has been experiencing high growth has further boosted the self-confidence of the CCP. It is against this background that since the middle of 1990’s there has been a change of tone in ‘public opinion’, TV programs, journals and books, etc. In place of national inferiority came a sense of national self-assurance and an eagerness to recover the past glory of the Middle Kingdom. The 1999 bombing of the Chinese Embassy by the US further reminded the CCP and common Chinese that the US is not a reliable partner after all, and the sense of external threat further provided fuel for nationalist feeling. It also coincided with a period of intense negotiation with the US over China accession to WTO, in which the US was forcing China into more concessions than most developing countries need to make. Furthermore, foreign capital has been fast in buying up Chinese firms, which many have regarded as a threat to economic security of China.
Nationalists and the New Left
We have seen that Zheng regards “the main sources for nationalism in the post-Mao era are domestic rather than external”. This is a hotly debated issue between the New Liberals and the ‘New Left’. By the term New Liberal we refer to the Chinese liberals and neo-liberals. Mixing the two together under the same category reflects the fact that it is difficult to distinguish the two in the Chinese context. Although in the West the dividing line between the two has been blurred, in China we can witness liberals like Yu Jie overflowing with such enthusiasm over privatization, WTO, sacking of SOEs workers and the US attack on Iraq, so on and so forth, that they carry little liberal value that is progressive. The ‘New Left’, according to Dale Wen, a visiting scholar in US and also one of the New Left, may include people from ‘social democrat to Economic Nationalist to Maoist’. [6] The New Liberals tend to think that the greatest enemy of China is its own obsolete institutions while globalization is the incarnation of the main current of modernization and civilization. Accordingly, the greatest horror for China is to stop half-way towards a full integration with it. So if there is a rise of nationalism it is only the fault of domestic institutions. Zheng’s comment echoes what the New Liberals have been arguing in their debate with the New Left. Meanwhile, the New Left, or at least leading spoke persons of it, tends to argue in the opposite direction. If any thing goes wrong in China, the blame should lie on external enemies, namely globalization and imperialism. When prominent New Leftists ever make charges against the CCP, it is that the CCP being too soft in dealing with external challengers. [7] In the dichotomy of market / state, foreign / national, West / East, the Liberals tend to argue in favor of the former paradigm, while the New Left tends to favor the latter paradigm.
The term New Left may lead non-Chinese readers to evaluate them in the light of the 1960’s New Left. However there is no ideological link between the two. The Chinese New Left is a term used to distinguish it from the Old Left, or Conservatives, who are die hard Stalinists. The New Left is by contrast very diverse. People considered to be New Left have huge differences among themselves. Their main common ground is a critique of globalization, the market, privatization, and liberal democracy. There is less agreement among them as to the alternatives to liberal or neo-liberal discourses. A common point may be the emphasis on the role of the one-party state, the value of collectivism, the importance of holding the multi-ethnic Chinese state together, a more autonomous path of economic development, and reference to a Maoist legacy, although not every one of the New Leftists share all of the above.
Major spokespersons of the New Left display strong statist tendencies and support for the one-party state going back as early as the post Tiananmen crackdown period, although at the time the term New Left had not yet appeared. While the New Liberals welcomed the collapse of Soviet Union, the New Left regards it as a disaster, a fate which China must try to avoid at all cost. In fact, their anxiety to keep the multi-ethnic Chinese state --- with the Han being the dominant ethnicity ----intact is so great that one may say that it is their primary concern, overriding all other values, be it democracy or equality. Their skepticism toward neo-liberalism and liberal democracy is chiefly driven by their anxiety about ‘stability’, which they see as threatened by market reform, accession to WTO, implementation of parliamentary elections, etc.---all these are not desirable because they may lead to the collapse of the Chinese state. In fact this train of thought echoes the Deng and Jiang administration’s well known statement at that time: Stability overrides everything! The statement is a reply to any aspiration for the rehabilitation of the 1989 movement, or for democratic election, or freedom of speech. It is obvious, then, that the first New Leftists are simply allying themselves with the authorities. The first well known New Leftists to write on this were Wang Shaoguang and Hu Angang. While the liberals believe the state must shrink in order to facilitate a growing market economy, Hu and Wang argue the opposite. In 1993 they published A Study of China State Capacity [8] in which they argue that a strong state is necessary for the market reform.
The Merging of New Left and Nationalists
By the late 1990’s the New Left’s appeal began to have a much larger impact concurrent with a great anxiety across the country in the midst of ‘external’ threats. China’s opening to the world had entered into a new period. The fear that China’s national industry would go under in the face of direct competition in the domestic market looked very real. In 2003, foreign firms accounted for 31 percent of all manufacturing output in China, up from 9.5 percent in 1992. The growth of market share for foreign capital at the expense of State Owned Enterprises (SOEs), and the immense pressure to restructure of SOEs in order to maintain competitiveness after China’s accession to the WTO resulted in 40 million SOEs workers being sacked. TNCs and the WTO, agents of globalization, were considered by some as an ‘external threat’ to China’s economic security, and to a certain extent this observation has a grain of truth.
It is to the credit of the New Left that they played the role of being the first critic of the New Liberals in this new period, for otherwise the dominance of the latter might have been even more pronounced. Two main scholars, Han Deqiang and Yang Fan, have become the most well known spokespersons of the New Left at the turn of the century. They have written extensively against globalization and China’s accession to WTO. In 2000 Han published The Crash - The Global Trap and China’s Realistic Choice. [9] He describes the high hopes among Chinese on WTO accession and the supposed efficiency of market as ‘market romanticism’. Contrary to the neo-liberals’ claim, China’s accession toward the WTO under the current terms would only jeopardize infant national industry. He noted that:
“The effect of globalization is the rapid seizure of the high value-added branches of the Chinese economy by foreign capital and imported goods. Some of them have now been totally dominated by foreign capital. SOEs and other (domestic firms) have found their profit sources are drying up, losses are reported, bad are debts rising, firms are on the verge of bankruptcy, and real unemployment rises steeply. All of these seriously threaten the betterment of people’s livelihood and social stability.” [10]
In place of ‘market romanticism’ Han counter poses ‘market realism’, which sees protectionism, rather than free trade, as necessary for developing countries. In the book he never opposes China’s accession to the WTO in principle, but merely considers the terms being agreed on by China as going too far. He only argues for a better deal for China’s accession, one that would better protect China’s market and at the same time enable China to acquire a bigger share of the world market. The question is: how to achieve this? His answer is:
“Market realism demands that we take the state to be the embodiment of our highest interest, and to have a sober understanding of the market as a battlefield of competition. Under the guidance of market realism, all our infant industry will be combined and formed into a single unit under the auspices of the state, and then join competition in the world market, fight a pro-longed war of the weak against the strong, and eventually achieve the genuine rise of China.” [11]
“When we ultimately win this economic war, China will not only develop fully within the WTO regime, but it will even become possible to dominate it.” [12]
Han’s critique of globalization and WTO is essentially what this mother advised her son. It is not really opposing corporate led globalization as such, but essentially only advocacy for Chinese version of globalization, one which may have a stronger element of protectionism, but which essentially is just a second route for China’s integration with global capitalism in contrast to the first route dictated by US and EU. In place of the Americanization of the world Han wants Sinolization.
Zheng thought that
“New Liberals represent the interest of newly rising rich class, while the New Left represents the interest of workers and farmers.” [13]
Zheng’s view on the liberals is correct, but fundamentally wrong on the New Left, as far as its major spokespersons are concerned. Han Deqiang in fact frankly admitted in an NGOs workshop held during the 6th Ministerial Meeting of the WTO that
“The New Left does not have a workers’ and farmers’ position. Our main concern is how to avoid catastrophe. We hope to have adjustment (of government policy). We have wide spread support among the middle and higher rank (of government officials). In the eyes of workers and farmers, we may be considered as running dogs of the capitalists. We do not want instability. We are reformists.” [14]
Later Han wrote an article explaining further:
“The new leadership of the Central government has already noticed the problem (of the widening gap of rich and poor, unemployment etc). That is why they advocate sustainable development, harmonious society, autonomous innovation, etc. Their ideas are to a certain degree influenced by the New Left.
“As to the question of ‘should we not do something for workers?’, my reply is that I am more concerned about social crises and the outbreak of catastrophe. My position may be regarded by workers and farmers as ‘running dog of capitalists’. What I propose is to replace one off exploitation with sustainable exploitation.” [15]
We understand well that we must take into account that for all Chinese participants of the debate they may not be able to speak freely under censorship. However, the truth is that even under the same censorship there are some New Leftists, sincere Maoists or broad leftists who have not succumbed to nationalism and statism. Wang Hui, another prominent scholar of the New Left, exhibits little nationalism in his critique on globalization, and his emphasis on the active role of the workers movement in social changes is rare among New Left. Kuang Xinnian, who is considered a Maoist, is in many respects remains faithful to the CPP’s original critical position on nationalism and even in certain extent supercedes it:
“Nationalism is a kind of bourgeois ideology. Essentially it is a kind of thinking used to suppress the class consciousness of the proletariat and socialist ideology. One of the important causes for the collapse of Soviet Union is the limitation of ‘socialism in one country’, which resulted in ideological degeneration from a socialist vision to that of nationalism, and ultimately metamorphosis into ‘social-imperialism’. ...If China simply endorses nationalism as an alternative ideology, it will not be able to solve domestic class antagonism and also the conflict between nation states, on the contrary it only serves to reinforce these conflicts. This would be a tragedy not only for China, but also for the world.” [16]
Unfortunately these voices are far too marginalized, apart from the fact that these New Leftists seem to avoid direct debate with the Nationalists. It is by no means accidental, because these critical New Leftists are too heterogonous to make effective responses to the Nationalists.
To conclude, there are good reasons to expect an ever stronger response to neo-liberalism and corporate led globalization in the years to come in China. About this we are optimistic. However, the one-party state, with the help of nationalists like Han, to a great degree shaped the response into a nationalist and statist discourse. If a movement from below is steered in that direction, it will add fuel to Chinese nationalism. It goes without saying that there is something the Left can do other than just sit and wait to see what happens next. The urgent task of the Left is to make a thorough critique of the statist and nationalist tradition --- which is deeply rooted in China --- and the one party regime. Our vision for a just society cannot incorporate any nationalist or statist elements, or any accommodation to the one-party state. If another world is necessary then it must put individual rights, pluralism in party politics, political and economic democracy, and last, but not least, internationalism, as its core value. It also implies a transcendence of the narrow discourses of both the New Liberals and the Nationalist Left.
8rd August 2006
Notes
1. On this subject please refer to the author’s Post MFA era and the rise of China at the website of Globalization Monitor: http://globalmon.org.hk
2. Globalization and State Transformation in China, Cambridge University Press, 2004, p.51
3. Ibid, p. 41
4. “Nationalism is the bourgeoisie’s viewpoint on nations; its program and principle in dealing with national issue..... In colonial, semi-colonial countries and independent nation, national struggles against imperialism, nationalism is to a certain extent progressive, but only to the extent that this is in accordance to the interests of the bourgeoisie.....The world view of proletarian parties is internationalism, not nationalism.” Ci Hai (Dictionary), Shanghai Dictionary Press, 1980, p. 1805
5. There was then a common and deep anxiety across social classes on the danger of China losing qiu-ji, or global citizenship, because of the slowness of reform.
6. China copes with globalization --- a mixed review, published by International Forum On Globalization, p.39
7. There are of course New Leftists who are less pro-government, but very often they are less well known. A major exception is Wang Hui.
8. Zhongguo guojia nengli baogao, Liaoning People’s publisher, 1993.
9. Pengzhuang, published by Economic Management Press, 2000.
10. Ibid, p. 5-6.
11. Ibid, p.160
12. Ibid, p.8
13. Globalization and State Transformation in China, Cambridge University Press, 2004, p. 186
14. Shi gongnong de wuhui, haishi xinzuopai de wuhui? (Who have misunderstood things? The working people or the New Left?), a report on the workshop on China organized by Focus of the Global South, International Forum on Globalization, Globalization Monitor. See http://xinmiao.hk.st
15. Zai Tuopai yanzhong shui bushi zibenjia de zougou --- huida yixie pengyou de yiwen, (In the eyes of the Trotskyists, who are not running dogs of capitalists?, https://host378.ipowerweb.com/~gongnong/bbs/read.php?f=3&i=144059&t=144059
16. minzuzhuyi yu zhongguo (Nationalism and China), http://www.hexinbbs.com/article/Show Article.asp?Article1D=37