Upstart cover art

Upstart

How China Became a Great Power

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Upstart

By: Oriana Skylar Mastro
Narrated by: Robin McAlpine
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About this listen

A powerful new explanation of China's rise that draws from the business world to show that China is not simply copying established great powers, but exploiting geopolitical opportunities around the world that those other powers had ignored.

Thirty years ago, the idea that China could challenge the United States economically, globally, and militarily seemed unfathomable. Yet today, China is considered another great power in the international system. How did China manage to build power, from a weaker resource position, in an international system that was dominated by the U.S.? What factors determined the strategies Beijing pursued to achieve this feat?

Using granular data and authoritative Chinese sources, Oriana Skylar Mastro demonstrates that China was able to climb to great power status through a careful mix of strategic emulation, exploitation, and entrepreneurship on the international stage. This “upstart approach”—determined by where and how China chose to compete—allowed China to rise economically, politically, and militarily, without triggering a catastrophic international backlash that would stem its rise. China emulated (i.e. pursued similar strategies to the U.S. in similar areas) when its leaders thought doing so would build power, while reassuring the U.S. of its intentions. China exploited (i.e. adopted similar approaches to the U.S. in new areas of competition) when China felt that the overall U.S. strategy was effective, but didn't want to risk direct confrontation. Lastly, China pursued entrepreneurial actions (i.e. innovative approaches to new and existing areas of competition) when it believed emulation might elicit a negative reaction and a more effective approach was available. Beyond explaining the unique nature of China's rise, Upstart: How China Became a Great Power provides policy guidance on how the U.S. can maintain a competitive edge in this new era of great power competition.

©2024 Oriana Skylar Mastro (P)2025 G&D Media
Asia Political Science Politics & Government United States World China Imperial Japan Military Socialism

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All stars
Most relevant
i got this book because I'd heard the author speak elsewhere a few times and always seemed quite astute. But, disappointingly, i had to listen to this book at 2x speed the whole way through because it is an absolute slog. I'll keep the review short because i dont want to waste more of my own time but:
-i learned literally nothing significant i didnt already know. Not one thing.
-theres the usual helping of ideology and moralising which interferes with the actual assessment of strategy.
-the author's theory of the 'upstart strategy' is comically simple and holds basically no explanatory power for geopolitics beyond what a child could tell you.

in short, a disappointng waste of time

Disappointing

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