Fr. 169.00

Memoirs of a Confucius Institute Director, Volume 1 - Challenges, Controversies, and Realities

Anglais · Livre Relié

Expédition généralement dans un délai de 6 à 7 semaines

Description

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As China s flagship platform for cultural diplomacy and international engagement, the global expansion of Confucius Institutes has been accompanied by growing controversy particularly in the West. This book and the volumes that follow is the first of its kind to demystify Confucius Institutes through the personal account of a director. Drawing on the author s unique background as a Chinese national serving as a UK director and a scholar of Chinese politics, this book offers a rare and nuanced perspective on a deeply contested issue. During the author s over six-year directorship, his Confucius Institute became an award-winning organisation, receiving recognition both internally and externally. At the same time, he led the Institute in overcoming a series of existential and structural challenges from navigating the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and adapting to the dissolution of the Confucius Institute Headquarters, to responding to the UK s then-ruling party s campaign to ban Confucius Institutes.
This book offers behind-the-scenes insights into key leadership decisions, internal and external challenges, and the pivotal events that shaped this turbulent era. It also directly addresses the prevailing accusations against Confucius Institutes that they operate as instruments of propaganda, geopolitical influence, or even espionage, and that they compromise academic freedom or surveil Chinese students abroad. These claims are critically examined through the lens of the author s lived experience, exposing how political and media narratives in the West often amplify legitimate concerns while oversimplifying complexities and misrepresenting on-the-ground realities.

Table des matières

Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Directing the Confucius Institute: the beginning, the success and the pandemic.- Chapter 3: Directing the Confucius Institute: the demise of Confucius Institute Headquarters.- Chapter 4: Directing the Confucius Institute: the political storm to ban Confucius Institutes in the UK.- Chapter 5: Allegations against Confucius Institute: Chinese propaganda and influence?.- Chapter 6: Allegations against Confucius Institute: suppressing academic freedom and conducting espionage?.- Chapter 7: Allegations against Confucius Institute: suppressing Chinese students?.- Chapter 8: Conclusion Chapter.

A propos de l'auteur

Jinghan Zeng is a Professor at City University of Hong Kong. Previously, he served as Director of the Confucius Institute at Lancaster University, leading a multicultural team of nearly 30 staff. He is the author of several books and over thirty peer-reviewed articles on Chinese politics.

Résumé

As China’s flagship platform for cultural diplomacy and international engagement, the global expansion of Confucius Institutes has been accompanied by growing controversy—particularly in the West. This book—and the volumes that follow—is the first of its kind to demystify Confucius Institutes through the personal account of a director. Drawing on the author’s unique background as a Chinese national serving as a UK director and a scholar of Chinese politics, this book offers a rare and nuanced perspective on a deeply contested issue. During the author’s over six-year directorship, his Confucius Institute became an award-winning organisation, receiving recognition both internally and externally. At the same time, he led the Institute in overcoming a series of existential and structural challenges—from navigating the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and adapting to the dissolution of the Confucius Institute Headquarters, to responding to the UK’s then-ruling party’s campaign to ban Confucius Institutes.
This book offers behind-the-scenes insights into key leadership decisions, internal and external challenges, and the pivotal events that shaped this turbulent era. It also directly addresses the prevailing accusations against Confucius Institutes—that they operate as instruments of propaganda, geopolitical influence, or even espionage, and that they compromise academic freedom or surveil Chinese students abroad. These claims are critically examined through the lens of the author’s lived experience, exposing how political and media narratives in the West often amplify legitimate concerns while oversimplifying complexities and misrepresenting on-the-ground realities.

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