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Autor
Jong-hak Kim (Northeast Asian History Foundation)
Tytuł
The 19 th -century International Law of the West and the Japanese Colonialization of Korea: Political Meaning of a Self-reliant State
Źródło
Rocznik Instytutu Europy Środkowo-Wschodniej, 2018, Vol. 16, z. 2, s. 47-61, bibliogr. 19
Yearbook of the Institute of East-Central Europe
Tytuł własny numeru
History and Memory: the Case of Poland and Korea
Słowa kluczowe
Prawo międzynarodowe, Historia, Stosunki międzynarodowe
International law, History, International relations
Kraj/Region
Japonia, Korea
Japan, Korea
Abstrakt
Carl Schmitt once stated that "a people is only conquered when it subordinates itself to the foreign vocabulary, the foreign construction [Vortellung] of what law, especially international law, is."1 If this is true, the three East Asian states - Joseon (Korea), China, and Japan - were completely subordinated to the rule of Western imperialism in the mid-19th century when traditional Sinocentric world order2 collapsed and the Western international law was generally introduced.(fragment of text)
Pełny tekst
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Bibliografia
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  1. A Chronology of Japan's Foreign Affairs and its Primary Documents, vol. 1, compiled by the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs (1965), Tokyo: Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
  2. Diplomatic Document of Modern Korea [近代韓國外交文書], compiled by the Compilation Committee for Korean Diplomatic Document, 2009.
  3. Historical Document on Negotiations among Korea, China and Japan during Emperor Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty [淸光緖朝中日交涉史料], compiled by the National Palace Museum Library, Taipei, 1963.
  4. Korean Diplomatic Document of the Past (Japanese version) [舊韓國外交 文書 日案], compiled by Asiatic Research Institute of Korea University, 1966-1970.
  5. The Diplomatic Material of Japan (Meiji Period) [日本外交文書], compiled by the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Tokyo: Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 1933-1963.
  6. Um-Chung Sa [陰晴史], compiled by Kim Yun-sik, National Institute of Korean History, 1955.
  7. Arai Shinichi, 'In Regard to the Style of the 2nd Japan-Korea Treaty - Highlighting Its Ratification', Quarterly Study of War Responsibilities, 1996, no. 12.
  8. Arai Shinichi, 'The Military and Diplomacy in the Process for Designating Korea as a Protectorate', compiled by Lee Taejin and Sasagawa Norigatsu, The Annexation of Korea and the Modern Times: The Reevaluation from the Perspective of History and International Law, Seoul: Taehaksa, 2009.
  9. Dennett Tyler, Americans in Eastern Asia, New York: Macmillan, 1922.
  10. Drake Federick C., The Empire of the Seas, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1984.
  11. Harada Keiichi, The Sino-Japanese Wars, Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kobunkan, 2008.
  12. Harada Tamaki, 'The History before the Establishment of the Double-folded System Between Joseon and China', The Opening and Modernization of Joseon, Tokyo: Keisuisha, 1997.
  13. Kim Yong-gu, The International Politics of the Crash of World Views: The Proprieties of the East and International Law of the West, Seoul: Nanam Publishing House, 1997.
  14. Kwon Hyeok-su, A Study on the History of the Relations Between Korea and China of the End of the 19th Century - Highlighting Li Hongzhang's Recognition of and Policy Toward Joseon, Seoul: Baeksan Jaryowon, 2000.
  15. Kwon Hyeok-su, The Reevaluation of Modern Sino-Korean Relations, Seoul: Hyean, 2007.
  16. Mutsu Munemitsu, Records of Loyalty [蹇蹇錄], Osaka (not for sale), 1932. * The manuscript was completed in 1895.
  17. Nakatsuka Akira, Occupy Gyeongbok Palace of 1894, transl. Park Maeng-su, Seoul: Blue History, 2002.
  18. Tabohashi Kiyoshi, Study on the Modern Japanese-Korean Relations, transl. Kim Jong-hak, vol. 1, Seoul: Ilchokak Publishing, 2013; vol. 2, Seoul: Ilchokak Publishing, 2016.
  19. Tokutomi Soho, Biography of Prince Yamagata Aritomo, Tokyo: Harasyobo, 1969.
Cytowane przez
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ISSN
1732-1395
Język
eng
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