Launched in 2013, China's Belt and Road Initiative is forging connections in infrastructure, trade, energy, finance, tourism, and culture across Eurasia and Africa. This extraordinarily ambitious strategy places China at the center of a geography of overland and maritime connectivity stretching across more than sixty countries and incorporating almost two-thirds of the world’s population. But what does it mean to revive the Silk Roads for the twenty-first century?
Geocultural Power explores this question by considering how China is couching its strategy for building trade, foreign relations, and energy and political security in an evocative topography of history. Until now Belt and Road has been discussed as a geopolitical and geoeconomic project. This book introduces geocultural power to the analysis of international affairs. Tim Winter highlights how many countries—including Iran, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Malaysia, Indonesia, Pakistan, and others—are revisiting their histories to find points of diplomatic and cultural connection. Through the revived Silk Roads, China becomes the new author of Eurasian history and the architect of the bridge between East and West. In a diplomatic dance of forgetting, episodes of violence, invasion, and bloodshed are left behind for a language of history and heritage that crosses borders in ways that further the trade ambitions of an increasingly networked China-driven economy.
Industry Reviews
"Much of Winter's discussion is fascinating and convincing... A compelling study of how objects and discourses about past events and people are being mobilised as part of the wider diplomatic relations and cooperation structures of the Belt and Road. Covering a panoramic scope of issues, Geocultural Poweris well-suited for both introductory overview and scholarly reading."-- "Acta Via Serica"
"Tim Winter's book stimulates a most welcome and necessary conversation about power, politics, and the role of history and culture in diplomacy and international affairs. Geocultural Power makes a much-needed contribution to interdisciplinary analysis of global dynamics and to holistic understandings of the construction of new world orders."-- "Political Geography"
"As Winter notes, Geocultural Power is present in all tenses. This new theoretical intervention in understanding the BRI will allow the readers to understand how the past is reworked in the present to imagine and look to the future of history making."-- "Eurasian Geography and Economics"
". . . a careful deconstruction of the Chinese government's early twenty-first-century mobilisation of the nation's Silk Road heritage. . . Geocultural Power is a well-written, wide-ranging and innovative scholarly account that makes visible and comprehensible contemporary Chinese attempts at forging relations with nations throughout Eurasia."--Chima Anyadike-Danes "Inner Asia"
"'Big Idea' writers--including Niall Ferguson, Thomas Friedman, Francis Fukuyama, Samuel Huntington, Robert Kagan, Paul Kennedy and Antonio Negri, among others. . . . Winter offers Geocultural Power as a candidate for joining this list."-- "Tim Oakes, Political Geography"
"Geocultural Power vividly explains how cultural heritage and its historical narratives shape the geopolitical landscape. Focussing on China's reconstructive use of the Silk Roads as a geocultural imaginary in the Belt and Road Initiative, Winter convincingly argues that a historical narrative of the Silk Roads is of great use for rising China to enhance its policies of peaceful exchange and interregional cooperation. . . . [He] provides much-needed insight into the intersection of politics, history and culture, and an empirically rich account of China's reconstruction of the Silk Roads' transboundary history."-- "Asian Studies Review"