Cosmopolitan Confucian cultures: suggestions
for future research and practice
Sor-hoon Tan
1
Received: 28 May 2015 / Revised: 19 July 2015 / Accepted: 11 August 2015 /
Published online: 27 August 2015
© Academy for International Communication of Chinese Culture and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
2015
Abstract Is the success of the Chinese in so many domains all over the world
evidence that they are cosmopolitan “citizens of the world,” at home in different
environments, able to negotiate all the cultural complexities of a globalizing world?
Have Confucian cultures become “cosmopolitan cultures”? The revival of Confu-
cianism in the People’s Republic of China has been associated with cultural
nationalism, while others argue for cosmopolitan interpretations of Confucianism.
Philosophically, Confucianism is incompatible with a certain well-known liberal
conception of cosmopolitanism emphasizing impartiality and individual equality,
but the early Confucian texts have resources that could contribute to contemporary
moral response to cultural diversity. This paper explores the relationship between
Confucianism and cosmopolitanism from a different angle by asking how Chinese
diasporic communities reconcile the different demands of loyalty to ancestral cul-
ture, of cultural identity, with those of living among people of other cultures;
making a living and sometimes making a fortune in today’s global capitalist
economies; being mobile in a way that their ancestors could not even imagine; and
thereby having access to more of the world than Diogenes could even dream of
when he coined the term “kosmopolitês.” It argues that there is a need to go beyond
philosophical reconciliation, for more interdisciplinary studies of Confucian cul-
tures in diasporic communities and networks, for the actual experience of these
communities and networks in negotiating between cosmopolitan trends and aspi-
rations on the one hand, and ethnocentric biases and prejudices on the other,
provides better understanding of what Confucianism could contribute to contem-
porary cosmopolitanism and the potential of Confucianism to transform global
capitalism.
& Sor-hoon Tan
phitansh@nus.edu.sg
1
National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore
123
Int. Commun. Chin. Cult (2015) 2(3):159–180
DOI 10.1007/s40636-015-0022-1