Lexington Books
Pages: 284
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-6640-7 • Hardback • October 2017 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-4985-6642-1 • Paperback • September 2019 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
978-1-4985-6641-4 • eBook • October 2017 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
Yi Tae-Jin is professor emeritus of Korean history at Seoul National University.
Eugene Y. Park is Korea Foundation associate professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania.
Kirk W. Larsen is associate professor of history at Brigham Young University.
Preface, Yi Tae-Jin, Eugene Y. Park, and Kirk W. Larsen
Introduction, Yi Tae-Jin, Eugene Y. Park, and Kirk W. Larsen
Maps
Chapter 1: Japanese Expansion in East Asia and An Chunggŭn’s Peace in the East, Xu Yong
Chapter 2: An Chunggŭn and the Genealogy of Modern Korea’s Discourse on Peace in the East, Suh Young-Hee
Chapter 3: Visions of Violence, Dreams of Peace: Religion, Race, and Nation in An Chunggŭn’s On Peace in the East, Franklin D. Rausch
Chapter 4: The An Chunggŭn Trial and Peace in the East: The Effect of the 1905 “Japan–Korea Protectorate Treaty” on International Relations, Totsuka Etsuro
Chapter 5: An Chunggŭn and the Political Philosophy of Immanuel Kant, Sasagawa Norikatsu
Chapter 6: Three Images of An Chunggŭn in Chinese Narratives, Wang Yuanzhou
Chapter 7: An Chunggŭn and Liang Qichao: Two Lights of Modern East Asia, Yi Tae-Jin
Chapter 8: The Philosophy and Possibilities of An Chunggŭn’s Unfinished On Peace in the East, Yamamuro Shin’ichi
Chapter 9: Contemporary Meanings of An Chunggŭn’s Peace in the East: A Pioneer of the New Concept of East Asian Community, Makino Eiji
Afterword, Frederick R. Dickinson
A wide-ranging and multidimensional look at one of modern East Asia’s most divisive historical figures—national hero to some, terrorist assassin to others—this richly researched and fascinating collection of essays on An Chunggŭn offers surprising new perspectives not only on the man himself but also on the history of the region in the early twentieth century.
— Carter J. Eckert, Harvard University and author of Park Chung Hee and Modern Korea
An Chunggŭn is best known for a violent act in his 1909 assassination of Japan’s most revered diplomat, Itō Hirobumi. He is less known for the prison writings he compiled while awaiting his execution that reveal his aspiration for regional peace. The first English-language effort to discuss An and his writings, Peace in the East creatively weaves together examinations of his final thoughts as interpreted from a diverse array of perspectives.
— Mark Caprio, Rikkyo University, Japan
Thoughtfully framed, this fresh look at Korean independence fighter An Chunggŭn broadly conceptualizes his life and written work. Breaking free of the Korea versus Japan dynamic that stymies regional integration and understanding—as well as learning about An himself—the editors and authors of this timely volume situate An in the context of related anti-Japanese imperialist movements of the day, ranging from the Ryukyu Islands to Northeast China and within Japan itself. Moreover, they consider An Chunggŭn’s place and engagement with international peace movements such as the Red Cross, the Carnegie Endowment, the Nobel Peace Prize, and the Hague International Peace Conference. An is best understood, as one of one authors here explains, as promoting ‘an Asianism for organizing Korea, China, and Japan into a peaceful community of equals.’ That An Chunggŭn’s early twentieth-century vision On Peace in the East howled into the wind and ended in violence speaks only to the pressing need today continue to understand the alternate future for Asia he proposed.
— Alexis Dudden, University of Connecticut