Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: Global Conceptual History: Promises and Pitfalls of a New Research Agenda
- 1 How Concepts Met History in Korea's Complex Modernization: New Concepts of Economy and Society and their Impact
- 2 Differing Translations, Contested Meanings: A Motor for the 1911 Revolution in China?
- 3 Notions of Society in Early Twentieth-Century China, 1900–25
- 4 Sabhā-Samāj Society: Some Linguistic Considerations
- 5 The Conceptualization of the Social in Late Nineteenth-and Early Twentieth-Century Arabic Thought and Language
- 6 From Kerajaan (Kingship) to Masyarakat (The People): Malay Articulations of Nationhood through Concepts of the ‘Social’ and the ‘Economic’, 1920–40
- 7 Building Nation and Society in the 1920s Dutch East Indies
- 8 Discordant Localizations of Modernity: Reflections on Concepts of the Economic and the Social in Siam during the Early Twentieth Century
- Notes
- Index
1 - How Concepts Met History in Korea's Complex Modernization: New Concepts of Economy and Society and their Impact
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: Global Conceptual History: Promises and Pitfalls of a New Research Agenda
- 1 How Concepts Met History in Korea's Complex Modernization: New Concepts of Economy and Society and their Impact
- 2 Differing Translations, Contested Meanings: A Motor for the 1911 Revolution in China?
- 3 Notions of Society in Early Twentieth-Century China, 1900–25
- 4 Sabhā-Samāj Society: Some Linguistic Considerations
- 5 The Conceptualization of the Social in Late Nineteenth-and Early Twentieth-Century Arabic Thought and Language
- 6 From Kerajaan (Kingship) to Masyarakat (The People): Malay Articulations of Nationhood through Concepts of the ‘Social’ and the ‘Economic’, 1920–40
- 7 Building Nation and Society in the 1920s Dutch East Indies
- 8 Discordant Localizations of Modernity: Reflections on Concepts of the Economic and the Social in Siam during the Early Twentieth Century
- Notes
- Index
Summary
Since its first impact on East Asia in the latter half of the nineteenth century, European civilization has been considered a primary reference of modernity and for modernization. Ever since enlightened intellectuals began introducing Western knowledge for the purposes of ‘strengthening the state and enlightening the people’ of Korea, the social influence of modernity-related discourses has been paramount. From the moment Korea opened its doors to the world in 1876, however, the process has always been a contested one, leading to societal disputes over the necessity, priority and methods of importing ‘civilization’. As foreign influence and, in particular, Japanese power increased, the dilemmas of negotiating between voluntary reform and foreign intervention, as well as between traditional identity and global change, further complicated the conflict. During the colonial period, these issues remained unresolved in the tensions between colonizers and nationalists, radicals and gradualists, and urban elites and rural peasants. After political liberation in 1945 and even leading up to the twenty first century, disputes – over national division and legitimacy between South and North Korea, over authoritarian developmentalism and over the controversial issue of school history textbooks – are ineluctably rooted in the contentious understanding of complex modernization.
One way to resolve such conflicts is to locate Korean modern history in a global transformation: one that sees dynamic modernization processes as neither Eurocentric nor ethnocentric.
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- Information
- A Global Conceptual History of Asia, 1860–1940 , pp. 25 - 42Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014