Popular Movements and Violence in East Asia in the Nineteenth Century: Comparing the Ideological Foundations of their Legitimation

IF 0.4 4区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies Pub Date : 2017-11-01 DOI:10.21866/ESJEAS.2017.17.2.006
H. Bae
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT:In the nineteenth century, people in China, Korea, and Japan actively participated in popular protests. The rebellions in those countries had much in common, but one of the most striking differences is the degree of violence inflicted by these popular movements on their opponents. Chinese popular rebels were much more likely to kill or injure others than their counterparts in Korea and Japan. Such differences seem to be closely associated with the question of whether the rebel forces fought due to conflicting interests within the polity, or were seeking to build a new kingdom by pursuing a newly-risen religion while rejecting the existing ruling system and ideology that legitimized it. This paper will examine how the rebel forces based the legitimacy of their actions in relation to each country's "political culture." While popular movements in the West or the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom were based on the idea that God was more powerful than the secular ruler, popular movements in Korea or Japan did not have a transcendent source of authority that was superior to the monarch. This paper argues that this made a crucial difference to how people thought and behaved, influencing the degree of violence they employed.
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19世纪东亚的民众运动与暴力:比较其正当性的思想基础
摘要:在19世纪,中国、韩国和日本人民积极参与民众抗议活动。这些国家的叛乱有很多共同点,但最显著的区别之一是这些民众运动对对手施加的暴力程度。与韩国和日本的叛军相比,中国受欢迎的叛军更有可能杀害或伤害他人。这种差异似乎与反叛力量的战斗是由于政体内部的利益冲突,还是通过追求新崛起的宗教来寻求建立一个新王国,同时拒绝使其合法化的现有统治体系和意识形态的问题密切相关。本文将考察反叛力量是如何将其行动的合法性与每个国家的“政治文化”联系起来的。虽然西方或太平天国的流行运动是基于上帝比世俗统治者更强大的理念,但韩国或日本的流行运动并没有凌驾于君主之上的超然权威来源。本文认为,这对人们的思维和行为产生了至关重要的影响,影响了他们使用暴力的程度。
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