高大伟教授(Prof. David Gosset),1970年生于法国巴黎,国际事务与国际关系专家,汉学家,中欧论坛创始人,中欧国际工商学院中欧文苑主任,新丝绸之路行动计划创办人。高大伟教授曾荣获法国荣誉勋章、西班牙十字勋章及保加利亚共和国荣誉勋章。高大伟教授精通法、中、英三国语言,他着重研究中国的转变及其对21世纪的亚洲乃至整个世界的影响,文章多见于《国际纽约时报》《赫芬顿邮报》《福布斯》,以及中国和亚洲其他国家的主流媒体。
目錄:
1. Variations On The Yin And The Yang 2. From The Chinese Renaissance To A Community Of Destiny For Mankind 3. The Courage Of A Vision For Sino-American Relations 4. The 19th National Congress Of The Chinese Communist Party Should Be An Opportunity To Reflect Upon An Experience Of Governance 5. The Belt And Road Initiative : Co-building A New Silk Road For The 21st Century 6. Xi Meets Trump: Deals Not Dreams 7. De-centering And Elevation Along The Silk Roads8. Artificial Intelligence And Global Geopolitics 9. The Sino-Western Relations In A World Of Change: Toward A Mutually Transformative Coexistence 10. Digital China And Its Implications For Europe 11. An Open Letter To The Chinese Friends Who Lit Up The Shanghai Oriental Pearl Tower With The Colors Of The French Flag 12. The European Union And China On The New Silk Roads 13. After Suez And Panama, Time To Build The Kra Canal! 14. Weiqi Versus Chess15. Sino-Italian Understanding Beyond The Passage Of Time 16. Chinas Grand Strategy: The New Silk Road 17. Fan Zeng, Mirror Of The Invisible 18. China Dream Over The Taiwan Strait 19. Knowing Fuzhou 20. Grandeur And Centrality 21. The Moon, Chinas Mirror 22. Xi Jinping, Person Of The Year 2013 23. The Significance Of Sino-Turkish Relations 24. The Confucius Institutes And The Chinese Renaissance 25. The Revival Of Chinese Tea 26. Life In Shanghai 27. The US And China In The 21st Century: The World Dream Of Sunnylands 28. The China Dream And The Liyuan Style 29. Frances Influential Power And The Sino-European Relations 30. Can Pope Francis And Xi Jinping Normalize Vatican-China Relations? 31. Xi Jinpings Long March To Defeat The Wests Fear Of China 32. Alexis De Tocqueville In The Middle Country 33. The Chinese Renaissance And The Making Of A New World 34. From Threat To Trust: Chinas Role In UN Peacekeeping 35. Janus-Like China 36. While America Returns To Asia, China Regains Centrality 37. A Renewed Ambition For Sino-French Relations 38. Chinese Centralities 39. Chinas New Role In The Making Of Europe 40. Chinas Subtle Power
內容試閱:
Introduction
The Huffington Post and China Daily have first published most of these short essays, but by having them in one publication the reader realizes that they are mere variations on one central theme: the renaissance of the Chinese civilization.
The texts are presented in a reverse chronological order and they appear as they were published at the date indicated for each article. Except for Chinas Subtle Power, the notes coincide with the beginning of what we call the Xi Jinpings decade. Xi Jinping became the General Secretary of the Communist Party of China on November 15, 2012 and the President of the Peoples Republic of China on March 14, 2013.
China is above all a living civilization. Her gigantic and complex society, her political life, economic dynamics and foreign policy can not be separated from her exceptionally long history and her rich culture. Therefore, one should not be surprised to find in this collection a consideration on Alexis De Tocqueville In The Middle Country1 and remarks on tea, Chinese painting or even the Weiqi game.
Global China is not only one of the elements of multipolatity, but it is also a source of a multiconceptual world in which different forms of modernity have to coexist. It explains why reflections on international relations occupy a large part of Limited Views On The Chinese Renaissance.
As a French citizen deeply committed to the European integration project, I have paid special attention to the Sino-French relations and the Sino-European relations while I am aware that the Sino-American relations will largely define our century.
I hope that some of the ideas presented will stimulate more debates and reflections in order to better understand what could be one of the most significant stories of our time, the Chinese renaissance.
The patient observer of the Chinese world, who has learnt to be humble in front of the complexities of a mega-society, is both surprised and amused by those presenting definitive grand explanations on the Chinese realities.
The expression limited views does not only introduce to very short essays. Someone who would pretend to capture all the dimensions and implications of the Chinese renaissance should not be taken seriously.
We are convinced that while we are discussing the Chinese renaissance, this process is not only reshaping the world in which we live the much commented power shift but also the way we look at it the less debated but arguably more fundamental phenomenon of cognitive shift. In that sense, it is, in any case, much too early to form a complete picture and full understanding of an epoch-making transformation.
We hope, through other essays which have yet to come, to continue on the path of describing with always more nuance the Chinese renaissance, a long but exhilarating intellectual journey.