China and Vietnam : the politics of asymmetry / Brantly Womack.
Material type: TextPublication details: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2006.Description: 1 online resource (xiv, 281 pages) : illustrations, mapsContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780511146954
- 0511146957
- 9780511610790
- 0511610793
- 0511568355
- 9780511568350
- China -- Foreign relations -- Vietnam
- Vietnam -- Foreign relations -- China
- Chine -- Relations extérieures -- Viêt-nam
- Viêt-nam -- Relations extérieures -- Chine
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Government -- International
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- International Relations -- General
- Diplomatic relations
- China
- Vietnam
- Außenpolitik
- China
- Buitenlandse betrekkingen
- Symmetrie
- China
- Vietnam
- Vietnam
- Geschichte
- 327.510597/09 22
- DS740.5.V5 W65 2006eb
- 15.75
- 89.70
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electronic-Books | OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-274) and index.
General overview -- Part One: Basic structure -- The parameters of China's external posture -- Vietnam's basic parameters -- The politics of asymmetry -- Part Two: The relational dynamic -- From the beginnings to Vietnamese independence -- Unequal empires -- The brotherhood of oppression, 1840-1950 -- Lips and teeth: 1949-1975 -- Illusions of victory: 1975-1991 -- From normalization to normalcy -- Change and structure in asymmetry.
General overview -- Part One: Basic structure -- The parameters of China's external posture -- Vietnam's basic parameters -- The politics of asymmetry -- Part Two: The relational dynamic -- From the beginnings to Vietnamese independence -- Unequal empires -- The brotherhood of oppression -- Lips and teeth: 1949-1975 -- Illusions of victory: 1975-1990 -- From normalization to normalcy -- Change and structure in asymmetry.
Print version record.
In their three thousand years of interaction, China and Vietnam have been through a full range of relationships. Twenty-five years ago they were one another's worst enemies; fifty years ago they were the closest of comrades. Five hundred years ago they each saw themselves as Confucian empires; fifteen hundred years ago Vietnam was a part of China. Throughout all these fluctuations the one constant has been that China is always the larger power, and Vietnam the smaller. China has rarely been able to dominate Vietnam, and yet the relationship is shaped by its asymmetry. The Sino-Vietnamese relationship provides the perfect ground for developing and exploring the effects of asymmetry on international relations. Womack develops his theory in conjunction with an original analysis of the interaction between China and Vietnam from the Bronze Age to the present.
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