
New Books in Political Science 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 economist who studies China, critiques long-standing Western fantasies and fears about China. He explores how romanticizing or demonizing China both simplify reality. Short segments contrast rosy narratives with threat rhetoric, examine state influence on knowledge, and call for plural perspectives and open debate.
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Idealization And Contempt Are The Same Simplification
- Western idealization and contempt of China are two sides of the same reductionist coin.
- Ho-Fung Hung shows both romantic praise and demonization simplify China into monotonic stereotypes across centuries.
China Lending Fits Domestic Overcapacity Not A Debt Trap
- Popular narratives about China lending to the developing world are polarized into 'altruistic' or 'predatory' extremes.
- Hung argues data show Chinese loans often promote sales of Chinese goods and mirror domestic long-performing-loan dynamics rather than deliberate debt-trap strategy.
Data Exists But Stereotypes Persist Through Habit And Incentives
- Plenty of accessible data exists, yet longstanding stereotypes persist because of cognitive habits and political incentives.
- Hung cites English and Chinese sources plus self-censorship by scholars seeking China access as barriers to nuance.



