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Under the ancestors' eyes : kinship, status, and locality in premodern Korea

Part of the Harvard East Asian Monographs series
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Under the Ancestors’ Eyes presents a new approach to Korean social history by focusing on the origin and development of the indigenous descent group.

Martina Deuchler maintains that the surprising continuity of the descent-group model gave the ruling elite cohesion and stability and enabled it to retain power from the early Silla (fifth century) to the late nineteenth century.

This argument, underpinned by a fresh interpretation of the late-fourteenth-century Koryo-Choson transition, illuminates the role of Neo-Confucianism as an ideological and political device through which the elite regained and maintained dominance during the Choson period.

Neo-Confucianism as espoused in Korea did not level the social hierarchy but instead tended to sustain the status system.

In the late Choson, it also provided ritual models for the lineage-building with which local elites sustained their preeminence vis-à-vis an intrusive state.

Though Neo-Confucianism has often been blamed for the rigidity of late Choson society, it was actually the enduring native kinship ideology that preserved the strict social-status system.

By utilizing historical and social anthropological methodology and analyzing a wealth of diverse materials, Deuchler highlights Korea’s distinctive elevation of the social over the political.

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Product Details
0674504305 / 9780674504301
Hardback
02/11/2015
United States
English
725 pages : illustrations, maps
26 cm