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Finally, a Guide for the Perplexed! China in the 21st Century: What Everyone (Yes, Everyone!) Needs to Know
I’ve long-admired Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom’s China writings for the way in which this author succeeds in making the country’s more obscure bits that much clearer for the novice China enthusiast or budding Sinologist.
Rather than further mystify the country’s infamous “exoticness” to Westerners and cast his readers further into doubt in copping to that most annoying of journalist/blogger catchalls like “if it’s one thing for certain, nothing is ever what it appears to be in China and everything changes constantly,” Wasserstrom distances himself from the usual scholarly bluster and navel-gazing by employing a novel Q&A approach in getting his book’s premise across. China in the 21st Century: What Everyone Needs to Know indeed attempts, as its title promises, to include just about everything anyone needs to know about China.
Leaving aside for the moment the discussion about the quality of the material to be found inside its covers or about Professor Wasserstrom’s throw-down (though I love it!) that what you’re about to read is “what everyone needs to know” about China, the book’s written using concise, accessible, easy-to-digest paragraphs.
This Socratic technique alone places the book firmly into front-of-mind awareness for the novice China reader. Those finding themselves armed with only the most rudimentary of knowledge about that juggernaut nation to the East will walk away, as Wasserstrom surmises “…[knowing] a few more basic things about the people of the PRC than they did when they read its first pages.” Old China Hands, too, might appreciate this book as a ready reference, and perhaps even those claiming “expert” status about the country will be pleasantly surprised to discover how the book challenges several of their rigorously-held assumptions. As for myself, someone who considers himself a novice in chinoisierie, it achieved its mission masterfully. At a compact 135pp, I agree with scholarly reviewer Susan Shirk who claimed that the book “…provides the essential knowledge that intelligent citizens need to have about China…[that] can be read in less time than it takes to fly from the U.S. to China!”







