Korea Between Empires, 1895-1919

الغلاف الأمامي
Columbia University Press, 2002 - 372 من الصفحات
Korea Between Empires chronicles the development of a Korean national consciousness. It focuses on two critical periods in Korean history and asks how key concepts and symbols were created and integrated into political programs to create an original Korean understanding of national identity, the nation-state, and nationalism. Looking at the often-ignored questions of representation, narrative, and rhetoric in the construction of public sentiment, Andre Schmid traces the genealogies of cultural assumptions and linguistic turns evident in Korea's major newspapers during the social and political upheavals of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Newspapers were the primary location for the re-imagining of the nation, enabling readers to move away from the conceptual framework inherited from a Confucian and dynastic past toward a nationalist vision that was deeply rooted in global ideologies of capitalist modernity. As producers and disseminators of knowledge about the nation, newspapers mediated perceptions of Korea's precarious place amid Chinese and Japanese colonial ambitions and were vitally important to the rise of a nationalist movement in Korea.
 

المحتوى

Civilization and the East
9
The Boundaries of the Nation
17
The Universalizing Winds of Civilization
23
Globalizing the National and Nationalizing the Global
32
The Pundits of the Nation
38
The Eyes and Ears of the Nation
47
Decentering the Middle Kingdom and Realigning the East
55
From Ancient Imperial Myths to Modern Colonizing Myths
146
Japanese Colonialism on the International Stage
160
Narrating the Ethnic Nation
171
6
199
7
224
Notes
279
Bibliography
337
Index
359
حقوق النشر

Contentious Histories
154

طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات

عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة

نبذة عن المؤلف (2002)

Andre Schmid is associate professor of East Asian Studies at the University of Toronto.

معلومات المراجع