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Globalization has brought together otherwise disparate communities
with distinctive and often conflicting ways of viewing the world.
Yet even as these phenomena have exposed the culturally specific
character of the academic theories used to understand them, most
responses to this ethnocentricity fall back on the same parochial
vocabulary they critique. Against those who insist our thinking
must return always to the dominant terms of Euro-American
modernity, Leigh Jenco argues - and more importantly, demonstrates
- that methods for understanding cultural others can take
theoretical guidance from those very bodies of thought typically
excluded by political and social theory. Jenco examines a
decades-long Chinese conversation over "Western Learning," starting
in the mid-nineteenth century, which subjected methods of learning
from difference to unprecedented scrutiny and development. Just as
Chinese elites argued for the possibility of their producing
knowledge along "Western" lines rather than "Chinese" ones, so too,
Jenco argues, might we come to see foreign knowledge as a
theoretical resource - that is, as a body of knowledge which
formulates methods of argument, goals of inquiry, and criteria of
evidence that may be generalizable to other places and times. The
call of reformers such as Liang Qichao and Yan Fu to bianfa -
literally "change the institutions" of Chinese society and politics
in order to produce new kinds of Western knowledge-was
simultaneously a call to "change the referents" those institutions
sought to emulate, and from which participants might draw their
self-understanding. Their arguments show that the institutional and
cultural contexts which support the production of knowledge are not
prefigured givens that constrain cross-cultural understanding, but
dynamic platforms for learning that are tractable to concerted
efforts over time to transform them. In doing so, these thinkers
point us beyond the mere acknowledgement of cultural difference
toward reform of the social, institutional and disciplinary spaces
in which the production of knowledge takes place.
As rapid economic development brings increasing uncertainty in East
Asia, interest in a new version of republicanism, termed iscalled
neo-Roman republicanism, is growing across the region.
Conceptualized as liberty as non-domination, this new form of
republicanism has inspired not only Western but also East Asian
political theorists. However, neo-Roman republican ideas in
Northeast Asian countries continue to face serious conceptual and
political challenges, which scholarly literature on both
republicanism and on East Asian politics has largely failed to
confront. This book addresses these challenges by surveying the
latest theoretical contributions to the studies of republicanism in
Western countries and the latest interpretations of how
republicanism, including both communitarian republicanism and
neo-Roman republicanism, has been appropriated in countries in East
Asia. In particular, it deals with the key question of whether
liberty as non-domination can work in non-Western contexts where
the fundamental tenets of liberal democracy, such as moral
individualism and value pluralism, do not predominate. Across three
sections, the chapters first provide a conceptual overview of
republicanism as a global political theory, they then consider how
republicanism has historically been received, resisted, and
translated into East Asia., and Ffinally, they examine how
historically informed possibilities fit with the emergent needs of
contemporary Northeast Asian societies. Overall, the contributors
show that republicanism is an always-ongoing project, whose terms
must be interpreted and translated into the various communities
they inform. Normative considerations about whether or how
republicanism applies in East Asia cannot be divorced from
historical and empirical approaches which consider the various ways
in which republican ideals reflect the realities of life there.
Dealing with the issue of republicanism from a new, comparative
perspective, this book will have broad appeal to students and
scholars of Asian studies, comparative political theory, political
philosophy, sociology, and history.
As rapid economic development brings increasing uncertainty in East
Asia, interest in a new version of republicanism, termed iscalled
neo-Roman republicanism, is growing across the region.
Conceptualized as liberty as non-domination, this new form of
republicanism has inspired not only Western but also East Asian
political theorists. However, neo-Roman republican ideas in
Northeast Asian countries continue to face serious conceptual and
political challenges, which scholarly literature on both
republicanism and on East Asian politics has largely failed to
confront. This book addresses these challenges by surveying the
latest theoretical contributions to the studies of republicanism in
Western countries and the latest interpretations of how
republicanism, including both communitarian republicanism and
neo-Roman republicanism, has been appropriated in countries in East
Asia. In particular, it deals with the key question of whether
liberty as non-domination can work in non-Western contexts where
the fundamental tenets of liberal democracy, such as moral
individualism and value pluralism, do not predominate. Across three
sections, the chapters first provide a conceptual overview of
republicanism as a global political theory, they then consider how
republicanism has historically been received, resisted, and
translated into East Asia., and Ffinally, they examine how
historically informed possibilities fit with the emergent needs of
contemporary Northeast Asian societies. Overall, the contributors
show that republicanism is an always-ongoing project, whose terms
must be interpreted and translated into the various communities
they inform. Normative considerations about whether or how
republicanism applies in East Asia cannot be divorced from
historical and empirical approaches which consider the various ways
in which republican ideals reflect the realities of life there.
Dealing with the issue of republicanism from a new, comparative
perspective, this book will have broad appeal to students and
scholars of Asian studies, comparative political theory, political
philosophy, sociology, and history.
Globalization has brought together otherwise disparate communities
with distinctive and often conflicting ways of viewing the world.
Yet even as these phenomena have exposed the culturally specific
character of the academic theories used to understand them, most
responses to this ethnocentricity fall back on the same parochial
vocabulary they critique. Against those who insist our thinking
must return always to the dominant terms of Euro-American
modernity, Leigh Jenco argues - and more importantly, demonstrates
- that methods for understanding cultural others can take
theoretical guidance from those very bodies of thought typically
excluded by political and social theory. Jenco examines a
decades-long Chinese conversation over "Western Learning," starting
in the mid-nineteenth century, which subjected methods of learning
from difference to unprecedented scrutiny and development. Just as
Chinese elites argued for the possibility of their producing
knowledge along "Western" lines rather than "Chinese" ones, so too,
Jenco argues, might we come to see foreign knowledge as a
theoretical resource - that is, as a body of knowledge which
formulates methods of argument, goals of inquiry, and criteria of
evidence that may be generalizable to other places and times. The
call of reformers such as Liang Qichao and Yan Fu to bianfa -
literally "change the institutions" of Chinese society and politics
in order to produce new kinds of Western knowledge-was
simultaneously a call to "change the referents" those institutions
sought to emulate, and from which participants might draw their
self-understanding. Their arguments show that the institutional and
cultural contexts which support the production of knowledge are not
prefigured givens that constrain cross-cultural understanding, but
dynamic platforms for learning that are tractable to concerted
efforts over time to transform them. In doing so, these thinkers
point us beyond the mere acknowledgement of cultural difference
toward reform of the social, institutional and disciplinary spaces
in which the production of knowledge takes place.
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