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A Korean Scholars Rude Awakening in Qing China : Pak Chegas Discourse on Northern Learning

Author :  Byonghon Choi, Seung B. Kye & Timothy V. Atkinson (Translated & Annotated)

Product Details

Country
United States
Publisher
University of Hawaii Press, USA
ISBN 9780824877934
Format HardBound
Language English
Year of Publication 2020
Bib. Info x, 234p. Includes Index ; Bibliography
Product Weight 570 gms.
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Product Description

1. China – Description and travel – Early works to 1800. 2. China – Social life and customs – 18th century – Early works to 1800. 3. China Social conditions – 18th century – Early works to 1800. 4. Korea – Social conditions 1392-1910 – Early works to 1800. Two years after Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations was published in 1776, Pak Chega’s (1750–1805) Discourse on Northern Learning appeared on the opposite corner of the globe. Both books presented notions of wealth and the economy for critical review: the former caused a stir across Europe, the latter influenced only a modest group of Choson (1392–1897) Korea scholars and other intellectuals. Nevertheless, the ideas of both thinkers closely reflected the spirit of their times and helped define certain schools of thought—in the case of Pak, Northern Learning (Pukhak), which disparaged the Choson Neo-Confucian state ideology as inert and ineffective. Years of humiliation and resentment against the conquering Manchus blinded many Korean elites to the scientific and technological advances made in Qing China (1644–1911). They despised its rulers as barbarians and begrudged Qing China’s status as their suzerain state. But Pak saw Korea’s northern neighbor as a model of economic and social reform. He and like-minded progressives discussed and corroborated views about the superiority of China’s civilization. After traveling to Beijing in 1776, Pak wrote Discourse on Northern Learning, in which he favorably introduced many aspects of China’s economy and culture. By comparison, he argued, Korea’s economy was depressed, the result of inadequate government policies and the selfishness of a privileged upper class. He called for drastic reforms in agriculture and industry and for opening the country to international trade. In a series of short essays, Pak gives us rare insights into life on the ground in late eighteenth-century Korea, and in the many details he supplies on Chinese farming, trade, and other commercial activities, his work provides a window onto everyday life in Qing China. Students and specialists of Korean history, particularly social reform movements, and Choson-Qing relations will welcome this new translation.

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