Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Social groups & communities > Religious groups
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Building a Heaven on Earth - Religion, Activism, and Protest in Japanese Occupied Korea (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,334
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Building a Heaven on Earth - Religion, Activism, and Protest in Japanese Occupied Korea (Hardcover)
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Why and how did Korean religious groups respond to growing rural
poverty, social dislocation, and the corrosion of culture caused by
forces of modernization under strict Japanese colonial rule
(1910-1945)? Questions about religion's relationship and response
to capitalism, industrialization, urbanization, and secularization
lie at the heart of understanding the intersection between
colonialism, religion, and modernity in Korea. Yet, getting answers
to these questions has been a challenge because of narrow
historical investigations that fail to study religious processes in
relation to political, economic, social, and cultural developments.
In Building a Heaven on Earth,Albert L. Park studies the
progressive drives by religious groups to contest standard
conceptions of modernity and forge a heavenly kingdom on the Korean
peninsula to relieve people from fierce ruptures in their everyday
lives. The results of his study will reconfigure the debates on
colonial modernity, the origins of faith-based socialactivism in
Korea, and the role of religion in a modern world. Building a
Heaven on Earth, in particular, presents a compelling story about
thedetermination of the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA),
the Presbyterian Church, and the Ch'?ndogyo to carry out
large-scale rural movements to form a paradiseon earth anchored in
religion, agriculture, and a pastoral life. It is a transnational
story of leaders from these three groups leaning on ideas and
systems from countries, such as Denmark, France, Japan, and the
United States, to help them reform political, economic, social, and
cultural structures in colonial Korea. Th is book shows that these
religious institutions provided discursive and material frameworks
that allowed for an alternative form of modernity that featured new
forms of agency, social organization, and the nation. In so doing,
Building a Heaven on Earth repositions our understandings of modern
Korean history.
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