Current China is obviously in a post-revolutionary or post-socialist state, in which class struggle and mass movement have been replaced by the market economy in an age of globalization: a development that has marginalized the majority of world people. Dr. Wang maintains that this phenomenon is a direct consequence of postmodernism in culture and explores how this has manifested with “localized” characteristics in Chinese culture. He will discuss the “glocalized” postcolonial culture and its struggle with the ongoing discourse of Confucianism on Chinese cultural soil.