Lexington Books
Pages: 368
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-0-7391-8100-3 • Hardback • November 2014 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
978-0-7391-8101-0 • eBook • November 2014 • $139.50 • (£108.00)
Kang Jung In is professor in the Department of Political Science at Sogang University.
Part 1 Theorizing Contemporary Korean Politics
1. The Ideological Terrain of Contemporary Korean Politics: From the Perspective of the Dialectic of Non-simultaneity
Kang Jung In
2. How the National Division and the Korean War Affected South Korean Politics: The Notions of “Liberty,” “Democracy,” and “Welfare”
Kim Dong-Choon
3. Liberalism and Modern State-Building in South Korea
Moon Jiyoung
4. The Politics and Political Science of the Clash of Civilizations: A Preliminary Study of the Intellectual Identity of Korean
Political Science
Yang Seung-Tae
5. Dongnipsinmun and Republican Democracy in Late Nineteenth-Century Korea
Lee Dongsoo
Part 2 Koreanization of Western Political Thought
6Redefining Citizenship in the Multicultural Society: A Korean Case
Kim Nam-Kook
7. Civil Patriotism and Liberal Collectivism in South Korea: A Sentimentalist Approach
Kim Sungmoon
8. Western Feminism and Korean Feminism
Kim Hee-Kang
9. A Study on the Acceptance of Rousseau’s Thought and Current Research in Korea
Kim Yong-Min
10. Rawls in Korea
Jang Dong-Jin
Part 3 Modernizing Traditional East Asian
Political Thought
11. The Concept of the ‘Public’ in Traditional Korea and Its Modern Variation
Lee Seung-Hwan
12. A Constitutionalist Interpretation of Confucian Politics in the Early Joseon Dynasty
Kim Bi-Hwan
13. The Confucian Tradition and Democracy in Korean Political Thought: The Distance between Mínběn (民本) and Mínzhǔ (民主)
Kim Seog Gun
14. Liberalist Human Rights and the Confucian Ethics of Human Relationships
Lee Sang-ik
Contemporary Korean Political Thought is an important collection of high-quality essays exploring the interaction between the Korean and Western traditions of political thought from different perspectives. It shows how to conduct such a dialogue and how, as a result, to develop a conceptual framework capable of theorizing the Korean political life. The work is a most welcome collection in its own right and also as an example to other non-western academic communities.
— Bhikhu Parekh, University of Westminster
Like many other societies in the world the Republic of Korea draws on very different traditions of thinking and political experience in its attempts to interpret its continuing political problems and the resources which it can deploy to meet them. Kang Jung In's absorbing volume draws together the attempts of leading Korean academic political theorists principally preoccupied with Korea's reception and transformation of European categories and ideologies and with the responses of interpreters of its ancient Confucian political traditions to the practical and intellectual challenges posed by western and subsequently Japanese imperialism. He counterposes these to its rather less successful attempt to forge new categories of its own to capture and shape the last seven decades of its political experience. The result is a far more synoptic view than any previously available of a society of great vigour and impressive ambition struggling to define its own political identity and judge together how to face its political future. Anyone interested in Korea's tumultuous politics will find much to reflect on in its pages.
— John Dunn, Fellow of King's College & Emeritus Professor of Political Theory, University of Cambridge
With its national division between North and South, recent history of authoritarian government under US tutelage, long-standing tradition of Confucianism and reception of western thought over centuries, Korea provides material aplenty for political theory. Kang Jung In has gathered an insightful group of scholars addressing contemporary issues, the Koreanization of western thought and modernization of Confucian thought. If proof were needed that comparative political theory has come of age, this is it.
— Albert Weale, University College London
In this admirable, excellent, and highly innovative book, leading Korean political theorist, Kang Jung In, and his colleagues confront the pervading problem of Eurocentrism in the Korean Academy. By re-thinking theory in a Korean context and simultaneously projecting Korean thought in a new non-Eurocentric direction, this book is highly relevant to, and extremely topical for, a non-Western and Western readership alike.
— John M. Hobson, Professor of Politics and International Relations, University of Sheffield