“…Analyzing China through the practice of nation branding crystallizes these tactics of national image creation and projection, but pivotally, it also highlights another dimension of the country’s own perception of its influence and status, as well as its response to the challenge of global image management. The recent academic corpus on China’s nation branding efforts remains divergent, for example, with emphasis on a single event, such as the Olympics (Puppin 2021 ) and the COVID-19 pandemic (Lee 2021 ), or through particular domains such as social media (He et al 2020 ), sports (Li and Feng 2021 ), the Belt and Road Initiative (Zhang et al 2020 ), and intellectual property rights (Yang 2016 ), or in a specific country, for instance Britain (Wu et al 2021 ). This article takes an interdisciplinary approach and engages with these existing debates on three fronts: first, it shifts the attention of analysis to two alternative objects of study; second, it amplifies an often-elided, if not taken-for-granted, relationship to time that is a prominent feature of the country’s nation brand style.…”