The Political Culture of East Asia: A Civilization of Total Power

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Springer Nature, Mar 15, 2022 - Political Science - 129 pages

This book explores the phenomenon of total power in East Asia, with particular attention to China, Korea, and Japan. It shows how total power enables an examination of regional experience as a part of global context in order to demarcate the connections with other countries and regions that have similar political cultures, such as those in Central Asia, the Middle East, and East Africa. Moreover, it elucidates that the phenomenon of total power unpacks the interrelations not only between different countries, but also between political, economic, religious, or cultural aspects of the region as a whole, and of each country in particular. This book takes East Asia as a classic example of where total power has achieved the highest forms of development during traditional periods in the form of absolute economic dependence of society on the state, ideologically enshrined by a system of moral obligations toward supreme power that allowed for the establishment of a monopoly on forced labour, and the appropriation and distribution of social products. The author emphasizes the importance of exploring the tradition of total power with reference to the ongoing global crisis of European democracy. In doing so, the book shows that democratization has not brought qualitative changes to the political culture of East Asia. An essential interdisciplinary read for scholars studying political science, particularly East-West relations, this book situates East Asian political culture within a global context.

 

Contents

1 Introduction
1
2 Chinese Universalism and the Birth of East Asian Civilization
15
3 Modernity Turns Total Power into Total Chaos
46
4 Japan Finds the Solution
59
5 AntiChinese World Order of Japanese Empire
67
It is All About China
73
Total Power in East Asia and Beyond
98
8 Conclusion
115
Bibliography
119
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About the author (2022)

Oleg Pakhomov is an associate professor in the Arctic Studies Center at Liaocheng University, China. He received his Ph.D. from Kyoto University's Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies in social anthropology where he won a Japanese Government Monbukagakusho: MEXT Scholarship. He began his career as a public servant in the International Department of Primorsky Territory Government of the Russian Federation, where he implemented programs of regional development and cooperation with governments as well as foreign investors from the Asia-Pacific region. He was then the chairperson of the Department of History and Archaeology at Far Eastern Federal University, where he developed new legal and educational frameworks to strengthen scientific and educational cooperation with universities in China, South Korea, and Japan. He later served as an international relations advisor to the President of Kazan Federal University in Russia, establishing cooperation with universities in the East Asian region. In this role, he successfully implemented a number of joint scientific and educational projects with universities in China, South Korea, and Japan in different subject areas, including chemistry, physics, engineering and in social science disciplines. His research interests include comparative politics with a focus on the East Asian region—China, North/South Korea, Japan, and Russia. He is currently working on a project that develops the ideas of Karl Wittfogel on the tradition of total power during the contemporary period in relation to the political culture of East Asia.

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