Abstract
The rise of China troubles the taken-for-granted epistemological and ontological
constitution of International Relations (IR) theory. The Greek term ‘theoria’
implied travelling to foreign locales with the aim of gaining illumination that
can then simultaneously inform and transform the ‘home’ of the traveler. Yet,
instead of travelling, IR theory engages in silencing. This paper undertakes
an interpretative journey of China’s IR concepts. In particular, it looks at the
notion of guanxi – one of the two terms that goes into the Chinese phrase for
International Relations (guoji guanxi). The contention is that ‘relationality’
renders a more accurate translation of guanxi in English. In the process, the
paper uncovers the practices of ‘international relationality’ as an opportunity
to redefine the ‘international’ as a co-dependent space where two or more
actors (despite their divergences) can interface into a dialogical community.