posted on 2021-05-27, 21:21authored byAlexander Bukh
Drawing on the insights of the constructivist school approach, this
article joins the debate on the effects of rising China in Asia. The
existing scholarship devoted to no-material aspects of China’s rise
focused either on China’s ‘soft power’ initiatives or their reception by
certain audiences. In this article, rising China and its governance
model, are construed as a form of productive power, one that is expected
to bring about not only shifts in material relations and perceptions
but also transformations in the national identities of countries in the
region. This article focuses on South Korea and Thailand, two countries
with fundamentally different political systems but a similar pattern of
recent interactions with China. It analyzes the policymaking elites’
discourse and public attitudes and explores the productive effects of
China’s rise on national identities in the two countries. This article
argues that the impact of China’s rise on elites’ discourse has been
largely negligible with narratives on kinship and historical ties being
used by the elites mostly for instrumental reasons. At the same time,
this article suggests that the recent shifts in public attitudes towards
greater acceptance of authoritarian values observed in South Korea and
Thailand, may be indicative of the productive effect of rising China on
national identities in both countries