Description

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Trade Review
Michel Foucault famously stated that the modern West, while priding itself of its "democracy", has failed to abandon autocracy by refusing to "cut off the king's head". This fact is patently evident in the global arena in the continued Western assertion of planetary hegemony and domination. In his book, Kang Jung In valiantly wrestles with this conundrum from a "subaltern" Korean perspective, placing his hope in the emergence of a global civil society marked by "polycentric multiculturalism". Without equating a stubborn local retreat, polycentrism in his view requires a combination of global openness and cultural resistance, more specifically a "modernization of tradition" involving "learning the new by reviewing the old". Powerfully argued, the book is a vade mecum for anyone seeking a transit from Western-centrism into a more equitable global interaction among countries and civilizations. -- Fred Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame
Kang Jung In's book is a courageous and tenacious attempt to measure the cost to modern Korean understandings of politics inflicted by the western provenance of most of the central categories through which its citizens now speak and think about the forms political life assumes in Korea today. It draws on his experience of being taught by Hanna Pitkin to assess the prospects for re-centering their understanding in Korea itself -- John Dunn, Fellow of King's College & Emeritus Professor of Political Theory, University of Cambridge

Table of Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments Notes on Names and Asian Characters Introduction: From Western-centrism to Post-western-centrism Part I: Defining Western-centrism Chapter 1. Understanding Western-centrism Chapter 2. The Historical Evolution of Western-centrism Chapter 3. Western-centrism and Sinocentrism Part II: Western-centrism in Western Political Thought Chapter 4The Origin and Evolution of Western-centrism in the History of Western Political Thought Chapter 5. Western-centrism in Locke’s Theory of Property Chapter 6. Western-centrism in Samuel P. Huntington’s Theory of Democratic Transition Part III: Contemporary Korean Political Thought Chapter 7. Pristine vs. Secondary Modernization Chapter 8. The Ideological Status of Korean Conservatism Chapter 9. The Democratization of Korea or the Korean-ization of Democracy Part IV:Beyond the Shadow of Western-centrism Chapter 10. The Negative Impact of Western-centrism in Korean Political Studies Chapter 11. Discursive Strategies for Overcoming Western-centrism Chapter 12. Beyond the Shadow of Western-centrism Bibliography

WesternCentrism and Contemporary Korean Political

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    A Hardback by Jung In Kang

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      Publisher: Rlpg/Galleys
      Publication Date: 8/20/2015 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739180983, 978-0739180983
      ISBN10: 0739180983

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      Michel Foucault famously stated that the modern West, while priding itself of its "democracy", has failed to abandon autocracy by refusing to "cut off the king's head". This fact is patently evident in the global arena in the continued Western assertion of planetary hegemony and domination. In his book, Kang Jung In valiantly wrestles with this conundrum from a "subaltern" Korean perspective, placing his hope in the emergence of a global civil society marked by "polycentric multiculturalism". Without equating a stubborn local retreat, polycentrism in his view requires a combination of global openness and cultural resistance, more specifically a "modernization of tradition" involving "learning the new by reviewing the old". Powerfully argued, the book is a vade mecum for anyone seeking a transit from Western-centrism into a more equitable global interaction among countries and civilizations. -- Fred Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame
      Kang Jung In's book is a courageous and tenacious attempt to measure the cost to modern Korean understandings of politics inflicted by the western provenance of most of the central categories through which its citizens now speak and think about the forms political life assumes in Korea today. It draws on his experience of being taught by Hanna Pitkin to assess the prospects for re-centering their understanding in Korea itself -- John Dunn, Fellow of King's College & Emeritus Professor of Political Theory, University of Cambridge

      Table of Contents
      Preface and Acknowledgments Notes on Names and Asian Characters Introduction: From Western-centrism to Post-western-centrism Part I: Defining Western-centrism Chapter 1. Understanding Western-centrism Chapter 2. The Historical Evolution of Western-centrism Chapter 3. Western-centrism and Sinocentrism Part II: Western-centrism in Western Political Thought Chapter 4The Origin and Evolution of Western-centrism in the History of Western Political Thought Chapter 5. Western-centrism in Locke’s Theory of Property Chapter 6. Western-centrism in Samuel P. Huntington’s Theory of Democratic Transition Part III: Contemporary Korean Political Thought Chapter 7. Pristine vs. Secondary Modernization Chapter 8. The Ideological Status of Korean Conservatism Chapter 9. The Democratization of Korea or the Korean-ization of Democracy Part IV:Beyond the Shadow of Western-centrism Chapter 10. The Negative Impact of Western-centrism in Korean Political Studies Chapter 11. Discursive Strategies for Overcoming Western-centrism Chapter 12. Beyond the Shadow of Western-centrism Bibliography

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