China and the birth of Multipolar World. China vs America
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- $189.00
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- $189.00
Descripción editorial
The End of American Empire: China and the Birth of a Multipolar World is a comprehensive, multidisciplinary exploration of the structural decline of American hegemony and the emergence of a new, multipolar international order. Placing contemporary events within the framework of centuries of global power politics, the book argues that the American-led world system—rooted in colonial violence, slavery, and economic coercion—has entered a decisive period of fragmentation.
Author's biography
An American author, Walter Rebel is an independent writer and geopolitical critic whose work examines Western power structures, the crisis of American hegemony, and the rise of a multipolar global order. Writing outside formal academic institutions, Rebel approaches world politics from the perspective of an engaged observer, driven by historical memory, moral urgency, and solidarity with communities affected by war, intervention, and empire.
Influenced by dissident thinkers such as Noam Chomsky, John Pilger, Seymour Hersh, and Oliver Stone, Rebel's work integrates historical analysis, media criticism, and global political theory.
The End of the American Empire – China and the Birth of a Multipolar World represents his most ambitious project to date – an examination of the decline of the United States, the erosion of Western institutions, and the transformative rise of China and the global South in shaping a new international system.
Collaborators:
The author gratefully acknowledges the intellectual guidance and scholarly insight of three academic collaborators whose expertise has contributed to the depth and rigor of this book:
A professor of political science, whose knowledge of international relations, power transitions, and U.S. foreign policy helped refine the geopolitical framework of the manuscript.
A professor of contemporary Chinese history, whose scholarly experience in modern China, the development of the PRC, and East Asian geopolitics contributed essential context to the book's analysis of China's rise and its role in the emerging multipolar world.
A distinguished professor of literature and writing, whose expertise in narrative structure, rhetorical clarity, and academic prose played a key role in shaping the style, coherence, and intellectual accessibility of the final text.
Together, these contributors provided critical review, academic insight, and editorial refinement, enabling the author to create a work that bridges scholarly depth with compelling narrative clarity.