‘Getting Asia right’: de-essentializing China's hegemony in historical Asia

Abstract International Relations (IR) scholars have taken China's presumed hegemony in pre-modern East Asia as an ideal case to ‘undermine’ the field's Eurocentrism. If Eurocentric IR is guilty of ‘getting Asia wrong’, do students of historical Asia ‘get Asia right’? Analysts should avoid exotifying differences between the West and the East and ‘exchanging Eurocentrism for Sinocentrism’. This article tries to ‘get Asia [more] right’ by ‘disaggregating’ and then ‘reassembling’ taken-for-granted concepts by time, space, and relationality. When ‘Confucianism’ is understood to justify both war and peace in competition with other thoughts, it does not dictate peace among East Asian states or conflicts across the Confucian–nomadic divide. When ‘China’ is unpacked, it does not sit on top of an Asian hierarchy. When Korea's, Vietnam's, and Japan's views of their relations with China are examined rather than presumed, cultural legitimacy is thinned out. When ‘Asia’ is broadened to cover webs of relations beyond East Asia to Central Asia, Confucianism recedes in centrality and pan-Asian phenomena including Buddhism and the steppe tradition come to the fore. The article concludes that a better challenge to Eurocentrism is not to search for cultural differences but to locate Eurasian similarities that erase European superiority.

Mainstream International Relations (IR) theories have long been criticized for their Eurocentrism.For some critics, China is an ideal case to 'undermine' Kenneth Waltz's anarchy. 1 The China-centred tribute system of 'formal inequality' with 'centuries of stability' is contrasted with the European system of 'formal equality' 'marked by incessant interstate conflicts'. 2 However, hierarchy per se is not unique to Asia but 'a ubiquitous feature' of international politics. 3What seems distinctively Asian is the cultural legitimacy granted by shared Confucianism.David Kang argues that Confucianized states admired and emulated China's civilization and 'hardly ever questioned China's position' in 'an accepted hierarchy'. 4Feng Zhang and Ji-young Lee champion the concept in their book titles: 'Chinese hegemony' and 'China's hegemony'. 5f Eurocentric IR is guilty of 'getting Asia wrong', 6 do students of historical Asia 'get Asia [more] right'?Kang is mindful of the risk of producing an 'orientalist analysis' that exotifies differences between the West and the East. 7Acharya warns against 'assuming a benign Asian hierarchy and seeking evidence to fit this cultural historicist straitjacket'. 8A genuinely global IR should eschew all forms of exceptionalism and ethnocentrism. 9o avoid such pitfalls, scholars should guard against 'exchanging Eurocentrism for Sinocentrism'. 10 Asian history should not be owned by any 'nation' or 'civilisation'. 11If 'theory is always for someone and for some purpose', then 'history too is always for someone and for some purpose'. 12If Eurocentrism takes 'sanitized and top-down' European views of the world as the 'real historical record', 13 works on historical Asia should triangulate histories 'from below' with those 'from the top'. 14Arguments for China-centred legitimate hierarchy should be built on thorough examination of how China's neighbours viewed the same relations.The horizon should be broadened to cover the full universe of China's relevant relations across Asia.Iver Neumann and Einar Wigen bring the steppe tradition back in because 'a science of International Relations that does not factor in all known types of relations between polities is simply not taking their raison d'être seriously'. 15he rest of this article tries to 'get Asia [more] right' by 'disaggregating' and then 'reassembling' taken-for-granted concepts by time, space, and relationality. 16he next section discusses contradictions in the literature on Confucian pacifism.The ensuing section takes lessons from non-China-focused studies on how to study culture.Culture should not be taken to possess dispositional essence but as reflecting internal differences and cross-cultural interactions and hybridization.Subsequent sections deploy such takeaways to de-essentialize 'China's hegemony' first in East Asia and then the rest of Asia.When 'Confucianism' is understood to justify both war and peace in competition with other thoughts, it no longer dictates peace among East Asian states or conflicts across the Confucian-nomadic divide.When 'China' is unpacked, it no longer sits on top of an Asian hierarchy.When Korea's, Vietnam's, and Japan's views of their relations with China are examined rather than presumed, cultural legitimacy is thinned out.When 'Asia' is broadened to cover webs of relations beyond East Asia to Central Asia, Confucianism recedes in centrality and pan-Asian phenomena including Buddhism and the steppe tradition come to the fore.Most of all, such a panoramic perspective reconstitutes 'China' as a plural and pluralist entity that embodies hybrid Chinese and steppe traditions and coexist in bipolarity and multipolarity.The article ends with a concluding thought that a better challenge to Eurocentrism is not to search for cultural differences but to locate Eurasian similarities that erase European superiority.

The culture turn's contradictions
The culture turn in studies of historical Asian IR has generated a burgeoning literature, but not without discontents and contradictions.Kang contends that shared civilization created a peaceful 'Confucian society' among China, Korea, Vietnam, and Japan. 17Robert Kelly highlights a 'Long Peace' 'rooted in shared, war-reducing Confucian ideals'. 18Hendrik Spruyt maintains that 'Confucianism formed the foundation of the East Asian belief system' which witnessed 'a remarkable absence of major power conflict' for 'millennia'. 19Yaqing Qin suggests that benevolence characterized China's foreign policy 'without much change for 2000 years'. 20Astrid Nordin takes 'harmony' to stand in for the 'Chinese system'. 21ven dissenters concur that Chinese culture is Confucian and Confucianism prescribes pacifism.The dispute is over culture's effect: if the above scholars take Confucianism as the cause for East Asia's peace and stability, Yuan-Kang Wang, a structural realist, treats it as the foil that is eclipsed by power calculation.He asks if 'Confucian culture constrain[ed] Chinese use of force in the past' and concludes that 'Chinese power politics was not rooted in culture, but rather in the anarchic structure of the international system'. 22Fei-ling Wang likewise presumes that Confucianism means peace, but the real 'nature of Chinese power' is 'a Confucianism-coated Legal [ist] authoritarian or totalitarian autocracy'. 23Legalism provided a 'powerful inner logic' which 'predestined and compelled' China to 'seek constant expansion'. 24ome analysts reconcile the contradictions by making Confucianism congruent with both harmony and conflicts.Feng Zhang coins the term 'Confucian relationalism' which encompasses both 'instrumental rationality' and 'expressive rationality'the former refers to 'consequentialist means-end calculation' and the latter embodies 'Confucian relational affection'. 25He finds that China's coercive policies are 'compatible with both'. 26Such an approach, however, deprives culture of its causal valueas x cannot be a cause when it is correlated with both y and not-y.
Xuetong Yan rescues Confucian peace by borrowing from the Christian theory of 'just war'. 27Confucians are 'not opposed to all war[s]' but support 'just wars' against those who go 'against benevolence and justice'. 28However, as Iain Johnston points out, the rhetoric of righteous war 'shifts the responsibility for warlike behavior onto the enemy' so that one's use of force is 'never illegitimate'. 29In Yan's account, the Confucian classic, the Mencius, is aware that 'using force and pretending to benevolence is the hegemon'. 30Another classical text extensively cited, Stratagems of the Warring States, advocates annexing territory and 'annihilating the inhabitants' because the survivors would otherwise 'seek to restore their state and annex you in turn'. 31It is difficult to square annexation and annihilation with just war.
Ji-young Lee moves from Confucian thought to tribute practices.Tribute practices were supposed to be so habituated to be 'unthinking' and 'unspoken'. 32Yet, she notes that norms were systematically broken.First, Confucian tributes should not involve 'economic exploitation' 'akin to taxes' and 'imperialism' as common for 'barbarian' Mongols. 33However, the Ming dynasty 'adopted some of the most notorious Mongol practices, including demanding human tribute as well as large amounts of goods', blurring 'the line between imperialism and … benign hegemony'. 34Second, the investiture ritual should signify China's respect for the political autonomy of the receiving country.However, the Ming 'employed coercive diplomacy' to 'extract Korean compliance', and even considered annexing Korea. 35Third, only Chinese emperors could claim to be the 'Son of Heaven' while 'barbarians' could not.However, Manchu emperors claimed the title, then demanded and received submission. 36Lee concludes that '[b]oth the Ming and the Qing crossed the boundaries of what was accepted as legitimate… tribute practices'. 37hat should we make of such contradictions?Does Confucianism prescribe peace?It turns out that these are the wrong questions to ask.

De-essentializing culture
Cultural works that are not directly China-focused point to the common problem of inadvertent essentialization.Ann Swidler contends that it is wrong to take culture as the 'unmoved mover' pushing human action in a consistent and predictable direction; rather, culture provides a 'toolkit' for 'strategies of action'. 38Cultural wisdom typically 'comes in paired adages counseling opposite behaviors' to 'justify 27 Yan 2011, 35, 41, 252-59.28 Ibid., 35, 41.   29 Johnston 1995, 68.30 Yan 2011, 49.   31 Ibid., 131.32   Lee 2017, 59, 62.   33   Ibid., 50.34 Ibid., 50, 81-83.35 Ibid., 50, 84, 141.36 Ibid., 49, 135.37 Ibid., 141.almost any act'. 39Christian Reus-Smit similarly emphasizes that culture is not internally coherent and externally bounded, but 'polyvalent, multilayered, riven with fissures, often contradictory'. 40Peter Katzenstein likewise rejects any presumption of culture's 'dispositional essence'. 41Culture should be understood as both internally 'pluralist' with multiple traditions and externally 'plural' in coexistence with other civilizations. 42George Lawson warns against using culture as as delivering 'essential truths', 'timeless categories' and 'unchanging reality'. 43Margaret Somers' critiques of critical identity studies are particularly instructive: works that bring in women and minorities turn out to normalize 'categorical identities' that are just 'as fixed and removed from history' as mainstream works. 44To better avoid the essentialism trap, Somers 'disaggregates' and then 'reassembles' cultural categories by the 'destabilizing dimensions of time, space and relationality. 45his article follows the above lessons to examine arguments about 'China's hegemony' in historical Asia.The time dimension means that any claims about the Confucian peace lasting for 'millennia' or 'thousands of years' are suspect. 46eleological history is a key intellectual obstacle in China studies.The literature suffers from the tendency to generalize from the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) eras back to millennia of Chinese history.Scholars should be mindful that the Han dynasty (206 BCE-220 CE), which promoted Confucianism, also invaded northern Korea and northern Vietnam.This prior history of colonization sheds much light on Sino-Korean and Sino-Vietnam relations in more recent times.The space dimension suggests that territoriality could be fluid, both within and across cultures and polities.The relationality dimension points to the necessity of examining cultural legitimacy on the receiving end and with all webs of relevant relations.
Subsequent sections will de-essentialize the Confucianism-based 'Chinese hegemony' by disaggregating and reassembling the plural and pluralist elements of 'China', 'hegemony', and 'Asia'.Patrick Jackson cautions that even the very term 'China'along with 'the West'presumes 'civilizational essences'. 47China' is disaggregated by identifying its duality as both the singular 'central kingdom' and plural 'central states'.Cultural hegemony is disaggregated by taking seriously contesting voices from China's neighbours.'Asia' is reassembled by 'yoking' 48 or reconnecting East Asia with Central Asia.Against the backdrop of an interconnected Asia, 'China' is reconstituted as a hybrid as well as plural and pluralist entity but essentialized as the singular centre of the world.strategic cultures is an apt illustration of within-culture tensions.61 China's own plurality and contradictions undercut the presumption of 'China's hegemony' as an 'unchanging reality' lasting 'for millennia'.
De-essentializing China's hegemony among Confucianized states Focusing on only the Ming-Qing eras, Kang, Zhang, Lee, and Spruyt find a deeply legitimate China-led hegemony institutionalized with the tribute system.Peace was embodied in Confucian norms.From top-down, China had no desire to seek 'expansion against its established neighboring states'; from bottom-up, Vietnam and Korea voluntarily submitted to the China-centred 'tribute system' because they admired Confucian civilization. 62Confucian beliefs and practices were so accepted that they were 'unthought' 63 and 'unspoken'. 64egitimacy is relational and must be verified by the voices of those 'at the receiving end of Chinese hegemony'. 65John K. Fairbank, who introduced the tribute system as a 'scheme of things entire', heavily relied on Chinese official sources which described every foreign mission as 'coming to pay tribute'. 66He was aware that the 'Chinese world order' was a 'unified concept only at the Chinese end and only on the normative level, as an ideal pattern' 67 : 'When we find that [the U.K.'s] Lord Macartney… is faithfully enshrined in the Chinese records as a tributary envoy, what are we to think of the preceding millennia of so-called tributary missions?' 68 Interestingly, works that champion China's hegemony in fact contain much evidence for neighbours' contradictory reactions that refute the genre's overall claim but affirm broader lessons on culture.Zhang observes that the tribute system was 'constantly revised, challenged, or avoided by different actors'. 69Lee's painstaking research of Korean state letters, court documents, and personal essays shows that Korea's Ming policy 'vacillated markedlyfrom compliance (in 1370), to a failed challenge (in 1388), back to compliance (in 1392), and then to another attempt at challenge (in 1398)'. 70Even instances of compliance were complicated by resistance.Her analysis provides the firmest support for Swidler's observation: 'savvy' (i.e.not 'unthinking') Korean leaders employed 'cultural resources for purposes of power politics' and 'manipulated' 'tribute practices to ensure and protect their political independence' against Chinese control. 71Kang challenges sceptics to produce evidence that Confucianized neighbours were 'placating China culturally while inwardly seething with resentment'. 72Seo-hyun Parkalong with Lee and Zhang -Chinano more than the use of English signifies the world's submission to American hegemony today.This is not to say that there was no cultural admiration.However, Kang finds that Japan's embrace of Confucianism was meant to be an equalizer to dilute China's claim to supremacy, because status rankings should be 'based not on size but on culture'. 99Japan made 'a distinction between Chinese civilization, which they revered, and the Chinese state, which they often held in contempt'. 100imilarly, the Vietnamese elite 'lovingly revered Chinese classical culture while at the same time bitterly hating China as a political entity'. 101t is also significant that East Asian hierarchy was 'fundamentally plural'. 102The China-centred tribute system was contested by Japan's, Korea's, and Vietnam's alternative orders.Erik Ringmar highlights 'two East Asian systems' in Tokugawa times (1600-1868). 103Tokugawa leaders established 'a Japan-centered version of the tributary order' by manipulating relations with Korea (via Tsushima) and the Ryukyu. 104Kang reckons both that 'the use of the tribute system by secondary states in their dealings with one another' contributed to system stability, and that 'states down the hierarchy had trouble dealing with each other and with determining their own hierarchic rankings'. 105The latter is more accurate because hierarchy stigmatizes subordinate positions so that powerful rulers strive to be the 'top dog or nobody'. 106hatever remained of China's legitimacy must be completely hollowed out by the Manchu Qing's 'barbarian' identity.As Lee pointedly asks, 'what if China as a country was no longer identified with that Confucian moral authority'? 107She laments that the Manchus' assumption of the 'Son of Heaven' was 'an attack' on 'socially acceptable practice'. 108Koreans, Japanese, and Vietnamese alike 'disqualif[ied] the Qing rulers from the status of hegemon'. 109In Kang's account, Hayashi Shunsai's 'The Chinese-Barbarian Transformation' published in the 1730s explicitly saw the Manchu conquest as transforming 'China from civilized to barbarian'. 110Korea, Vietnam, and Japan alike would see themselves as the new centres of Confucian civilization.These sentiments suggest that it is not appropriate to use the terms 'Confucianized states' and 'Sinicized states' interchangeably. 111Confucianized states saw themselves as 'sharers within a larger circle' of a universal civilization, of which China was only a leading member. 112ndeed, the Manchu Qing presents an existential challenge to the Confucian peace argument.Kang's classic work begins with this statement: East Asia was so stable that 'Hideyoshi's invasion of Korea marked the only military conflict between Japan, Korea, and China for over six [sic: should be "nearly five"] centuries' in 1368-1841. 113He later presents a list of six 'major wars in East Asia': (1) Chinese invasion of Vietnam (1407-1428); (2) Japanese invasion of Korea [the Imjin War] (1592-1598); (3) Manchu conquest of China (1618-1644); (4) Manchu invasions of Korea (1627 and 1637); (5) Chinese conquest of Xinjiang (1690 and 1757); and, (6) the Opium war (1839-1841). 114 This list omits the Qing's military intervention in Vietnam in 1788. 115More problematically, Kang counts only the first two wars to prove how peaceful East Asia was. 116He excludes the next three because the Manchus and the Zunghar Mongols were 'nomads' rather than 'Sinicized states'. 117The label 'nomads' applies to 'Tibetans, Uighurs and Zunghar Mongols to the West, Khitans and Mongols to the north, and Manchus to the Northeast', 118 the majority of which are presumed to be 'illiterate' and 'scattered, mobile tribes'. 119Curiously, the 'Manchu' of items ( 3) and ( 4) becomes 'Chinese' in item (5).In the genre of Chinese hegemony, the Manchu Qing (1644-1911) generally counts as the leader of the 'Confucian society'.

De-essentializing the Confucian-nomadic divide
The Manchus' boundary-crossing identity calls into question the cultural division of Asia.Kang argues that China and 'Sinicized states' formed a 'Confucian society' because they 'shared ideas, norms, and interests'. 120China and 'nomads' formed a 'parabellum society' because they had 'vastly different worldviews, political structures, and cultures than the Sinicized states'. 121That is, shared civilization among Confucianized states produced peace while clash of Confucian-nomadic civilizations engendered war. 122ang wants to divert attention away from 'where the fighting was' as in 'Chinanomad relations' towards 'why some states did not fight' as among 'Sinicized states'. 123Given 'the lack of cultural affinity' and growing 'ideological differences' 124 addressed in the last section, it is not obvious that the relative stability in East Asia was based on shared culture.Spruyt acknowledges that East Asian peace is underlined by 'substantial differences in military power' which 'would make overt conflict a fool's errand'. 125Manjeet Pardesi observes that the power differentials and the long distances between China and its neighbours are enough to make the probability of conflict 'extremely small'. 126Park argues that 'hierarchical orders endure not because of voluntary consent but because the constraints of hierarchy are a socially recognized fact'. 127oreover, if the steppe is 'where the fighting was', we should expect Central Asian polities to build strong states according to Charles Tilly's war-makes-state dynamics. 128Kang contends that '[w]hat centralized political authority that did exist among the various Central Asian peoples was often the result of the ruler's personal charisma and strength'. 129Yet, he realizes that the Mongols 'established enduring administrative institutions', the Manchus developed 'a stable government with laws [and] bureaucratic structures', and the Zunghar Mongols set up 'state-like apparatus of rule'. 130Ayşe Zarakol takes great length to show that Chinggisid rule exhibited a higheven extremedegree of centralization. 131Andrew Phillips details how the Manchus exploited a 'ready-made extractive apparatus' to milk China's vast agricultural and commercial wealth to facilitate conquest. 132Peter Perdue makes a selfconsciously Tillyan argument that the decades-long Manchu-Zunghar rivalry drove both belligerents to engage in 'competitive state-building'. 133If the Chinese distinction between 'raw' and 'cooked barbarians' is that the former did not pay taxes or supply corvee labour, 134 a critical marker of Mongol imperialism is the imposition of taxes and human tributes which Lee complains about.
Besides being empirically mistaken, the Confucian-nomadic divide also exhibits troubling ethnocentrism that should be eschewed by critics of Eurocentrism.Reus-Smit and Katzenstein condemn Samuel Huntington's 'clash of civilisations' for treating 'civilizations as coherent units of world politics, civilizational boundaries as key axes of difference, and civilizational chauvinism as a legitimate marker of identity'. 135Works on China's hegemony view Confucianized states as coherent units of world politics, the Confucian-nomadic boundary as a key axis of difference, and civilizational chauvinism as a legitimate marker of identity.If Eurocentrism makes a 'pernicious distinction between "state people" and "minorities"' to justify colonization, Asianists should be wary of a similarly chauvinist position that sedentary life meant civilizational superiority over 'nomads'. 136Suzuki points out 'uncomfortable similarities' between the 'dark with Mongol leader Altan Khan in 1571 153 and coexisted in 'bipolar competition' with the Timurids in West Asia. 154The Qing likewise treated Tsarist Russia with equality in the 1689 Treaty of Nerchinsk.
Even though Confucianism was not shared beyond East Asia, Buddhism provided the civilizational glue that connected 'the whole of Asia from Iran to Japan'across West Asia, South Asia, Central Asia, and East Asia. 155As Buddhism spread across Inner and East Asia, it forged 'a common identity' among diverse ethnic groups, 156 offering a shared faith, shared values, shared institutions, even shared diplomatic tools. 157In diplomatic relations, monks were appointed as envoys and Buddhist items were exchanged as precious gifts. 158If Buddhism is chosen as the primary cultural marker, Buddhist Asia might well resemble Christian Europe.
After 'the Buddhist conquest of China' 159 from the first century on, famous Chinese monks such as Faxian (337?-422?), Xuanzang (600?-664), and Yijing (635-713) travelled to India and returned with eyewitness accounts that depicted India as a 'holy land', 'a civilized and advanced society', even 'the center of the world'. 160Faxian's Notes on the Country of the Buddha (Faguo ji) 'consider as a matter of fact' that the designation 'Central country (Zhongguo)' could 'only refer to Madhyadeśa', the sphere of operation of the Buddha in central northern India. 161Faxian and his fellow-monks also referred to themselves as coming from the 'borderlands' (biandi)'. 162It is remarkable that Chinese Buddhists subverted China's standard of civilization by treating India as the centre and Buddhism as superior. 163he Mongol Chinggisid legacy also served as a 'shared ecumene' connecting the entire Asia, not just at the height of the empire but also after its breakup. 164Zarakol contends that the supposedly Chinese Ming emperors who overthrew the Mongol Yuan dynasty were acting like 'Chinggisid sovereigns' or 'khans', not unlike the Timurids. 165Timothy Brook points out that Lee 'shoehorns' Qing-Korean relations into the 'tributary system' and leaves out Central Asian influences, especially 'the Chinggisid model'. 166The critical demands that the Manchus imposed on Korea in 1637sending two royal princes as hostages, providing troops and supplies for Manchu military campaigns, desisting from building defence fortifications, and refusing sanctuary to refugees from Manchuriaare 'elements of Chinggisid practice' but uncharacteristic of Chinese tradition. 167The demand that Korea sent tribute every year may seem like a classic feature of Chinese hegemony, but is in fact 'heavily inflected by Chinggisid expectations', which regarded tribute as 'a significant form of state revenue that was intended to be onerous for the tributesender'. 168When East Asia is not seen in China's image, what is taken for granted as Chinese may well be Central Asian and hybrid.
Even Chinese culture reflects entrenched Central Asian influences.Neumann and Wigen restore the steppe as 'the willfully overlooked "dirty origin"' of Chinese as well as European state formation. 169The Shang's conquest of northern China was made possible by the war chariot that came from the steppe around the thirteenth century BCE. 170In the Warring States era, the state of Zhao adopted the mounted cavalry in 307 BCE in the face of the Qin's wars of conquest. 171ybridization ran so deep as to include intermarriages.Han's Emperor Gaozu (r.206-195 BCE) initiated a policy of marrying princesses to Xiongnu rulers to maintain bipolar peace.The Xianbei Tuoba who dominated Northern China in the fifth century cultivated marriage ties with fallen ruling houses.The Sui's and the Tang's early emperors emerged from this mixed-blood elite and claimed the titles of 'the Sage Khan' and the 'Great Khan' as well as the 'Son of Heaven'. 172The Tang Emperor Taizong (r.626-649) further entered into a diplomatic marriage with the then formidable Tibetan King Songtsen Gampo (r.629-649?).
Given the extensive 'yoking' and hybridization, how did the essentialized identities come about?Why do Chinese records make such a sharp Confucianized-versus-barbarian distinction?Reus-Smit and Katzenstein suggest that, where seemingly unified categorical identities exist, we should explore how 'cultural meanings and practices are constantly amplified or silenced, mobilized or suppressed', 173 and how 'political and discursive coalitions succeed in imposing a singular view … over alternatives'. 174Joseph MacKay points out that what really 'endured for more than two thousand years' was not political and cultural homogeneity and continuity but the 'persistence of a single imperial Chinese identity'. 175his identity formation is traceable to the early dynasties' encounters with the steppes, when the need for 'ontological security' motivated civilizational Othering. 176Qin and Han founders found the steppes 'unconquerable and ungovernable', 177 undermining their claim to 'singularity and universality'. 178Han's Emperor Gaozu was personally besieged by the Xiongnu in 200 BCE.If the 'Son of Heaven' could not really rule 'all under heaven', a face-saving solution was to cast those beyond his rule as being beyond the pale of civilization and not worthy of his rule. 179Steppe polities were depicted as 'China's political-cultural opposite': 'migratory rather than sedentary, diffuse rather than hierarchical, violent rather than harmonious, and natural [uncivilized] rather than historical'. 180hen the balance of capabilities shifted, the dehumanized Otherdepicted as having 'human faces but animal hearts' who were 'not of our kind' 181 could be subject to mass killing, even 'genocide'. 182Once the Han had built up its strength, Emperor Wu would no longer tolerate 'symbolic equality with the Xiongnu'. 183He readily abandoned peaceful coexistence and switched to a policy of conquest, killing, or capturing 489,500 Xiongnu in 133-91 BCE. 184Fast forward in time, the Qing dynasty engaged in 'genocidal violence' of 600,000 Zunghar Mongols in Xinjiang. 185The pattern has continued even after yesterday's 'barbarians' have become today's 'minorities'.
These processes explain why and how the Confucian-barbarian faultline was constructed and essentialized, and why and how the borderlands became warprone.The same imposition of essentialized unity has also buried what Phillips calls China's 'barbarian authorship'. 186

Conclusion
The above analysis suggests that efforts to escape Eurocentrism easily 'get Asia wrong' by falling for other forms of ethnocentrism.The deep historical analyses in the genre of 'Chinese hegemony' unearth important multivocality in cultural practices.However, authors overlook their own findings which are inconsistent with the overall drive to demonstrate that the East was marked by hierarchy and stability while the West was marred by equality and war.The most recent pan-Eurasian IR works uncover similarities from extensive cross-cultural interactions, borrowings, and hybridization.They may present a deeper existential challenge to Eurocentrism by erasing European superiority: European civilization had 'dirty origins' from the steppe 187 ; Western colonizers were originally backwards and had to learn Asian precedents to successfully colonize Asia. 188Acharya may have counted on the 'deep sense of legitimized hierarchy' in East Asia to help construct global IR, 189 but Eurasian similarities are more consistent with the goal of 'pluralistic universalism '. 190