New Books in Sociology

Ho-fung Hung, "The China Question: Eight Centuries of Fantasy and Fear" (Cambridge UP, 2026)

Apr 6, 2026
Ho-fung Hung, a Johns Hopkins political economy professor, examines eight centuries of how China has been alternately romanticized and demonized. He explores why simplistic fantasies and fears persist, how politics and scholarship shape those images, and why open, pluralistic debate is crucial to move beyond Orientalist stereotypes.
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INSIGHT

Contempt And Idealization Are Two Sides Of The Same Coin

  • Western portrayals of China cluster into two mirrored errors: contempt and naive idealization.
  • Both stem from simplification and reductionism that erase China's complexity and produce competing but equally distorted narratives.
INSIGHT

Debt Trap And Benevolent Lender Are Both Simplistic

  • Debates about Chinese lending illustrate the twin stereotypes: altruistic benefactor versus predatory 'debt trap' lender.
  • Ho-Fung Hung shows lending reflects China's overproduction and uncoordinated finance, not a deliberate strategy to seize assets.
INSIGHT

Information Exists But Stereotypes And Interests Persist

  • Lack of information is not the main barrier to nuanced China knowledge today; entrenched stereotypes and vested political interests are.
  • Authoritarian censorship and self-censorship by researchers further narrows public discourse and complicates inquiry.
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