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List of Contributors
Part I General Overview
1 Introduction: Modernities in Northeast Asia
Part II Modernity and Tradition
2 Equality and Nationality: The Emergence of Modern Identity Politics
3 China and the Production of Its Own Hybridic Modernity
Part III Embracing and Resisting Modernity
4 The Meanings of the 1919 Moment in China: Sovereignty, Connectivity, and National Awakening
5 Marginalized Science of Modernity: Statistics and Building a Nation-State without Knowing Oneself
6 Eastern Learning (Donghak) and Hybrid Modernity in Late Joseon Korea
Part IV Redefining Modernities
7 Modernity Before Its Time: China’s Zhou-Qin Transition as an Early Modernization
8 How Tradition Informs Chinese Modernity: A Progressive Conservative Perspective
9 Multiple Dialogues over Modernity: Considerations on Maruyama Masao’s Political Thought
10 Competing Modernities in Colony and Metropole: The Establishment of the Police System in Meiji Japan
Index of Names
Index of Terms

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To form a truer portrait of Northeast Asian perspectives on modernity, this book presents a broad range of analyses from philosophical and political-philosophical scholars specializing in the region.

The book considers the encounter between "Western" modernity and "Eastern" tradition not as a simple clash of cultures, but as a generative and hybridizing process of negotiation. It examines the concrete manifestations of modernity in various intellectual and political movements that attempted to radically restructure Northeast Asian societies. And through these situated perspectives, it rethinks and redefines the idea of "modernity" itself, challenging and presenting alternatives to Western-centric thinking on the topic.

This book will be of particular interest to political philosophers, political theorists, comparative philosophers, regional specialists in East Asia, and all scholars grappling with the perplexities of global "modernity."



To form a truer portrait of Northeast Asian perspectives on modernity, this book presents a broad range of analyses from philosophical and political-philosophical scholars specializing in the region.