"Rošker, Professor of Chinese Studies, along with Visočnik, Assistant Professor, both at the Department of Asian Studies at the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, have compiled a colourful selection of papers with wide-ranging topics—from education to aesthetics to morality and politics—that have one single golden thread running through them: the so-called "Confucian revival" that appears to have left its indelible mark on both theoretical and practical developments of the late modernity in the East Asian and in the global context, as well. Although Western theorists habitually tend to portray "traditional" and "modern" to be mutually exclusive, Rošker and Visočnik argue that, on the contrary, "the relations between tradition and modernity do not necessarily involve conflict." […] Overall, the enterprise of this collection is praiseworthy as it succeeds in showing that, contrary to Max Weber's dominant belief, Protestant Ethic is not absolutely essential for the advancement of modernization, and that the "East Asian model is capable of generating a non-individualistic version of modernity.""Lehel BaloghHokkaido University, Hokkaido University, Japan; Religious Studies Review, Vol. 44, No. 4