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The Master from Mountains and Fields : Prose Writings of Hwadam, So Kyongdok

Author :  Isabelle Sancho

Product Details

Country
United States
Publisher
University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.A
ISBN 9780824893637
Format HardBound
Language English
Year of Publication 2022
Bib. Info xvi, 246p. Includes Index ; Bibliography
Product Weight 600 gms.
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Product Description

The Master from Mountains and Fields is a fully annotated translation of the prose texts from the “collected works” of So Kyongdok (1489–1546), an influential Confucian scholar from the early Choson period (1392-1910). A native of Songdo (also known as Kaesong) in present-day North Korea, So has loomed large in the Korean cultural imagination and appeared as an exceptional sage and popular hero in numerous tales, dramas, and films, yet his writings are little known outside the academic milieu. Also called Master Hwadam, So embodied an archetype of the secluded scholar who remains hidden in “mountains and forests” to devote himself to his studies. Held in esteem in both South and North Korea today (a notable exception in contemporary studies on Choson Neo-Confucianism), So and his ideas about Vital Energy influenced the great Korean Neo-Confucian debates of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries surrounding the psychophysiological origins of morality as well as various non-orthodox intellectual trends in the late Choson. His thought is fundamentally rooted in the cosmology based on the exegesis of the Book of Changes and follows the teachings of various early Chinese Neo-Confucian thinkers; it presents a vivid example of the eclectic nature of ideas and intellectual trends coexisting within what is generically called Neo-Confucianism out of convenience. This volume presents the first English translation of all prose writings attributed to So and most of the peritexts from his posthumously published collection Hwadam chip. It reflects the importance of literary compilations (munjip) in the intellectual history of Choson and the complex process of the making of Confucian masters in Korea. So’s prose works are concise and diverse and offer a glimpse at an author who thwarts stereotyping; an introduction and annotations provide further context. The lengthy endnotes that accompany each text make this a useful handbook for anybody interested in Choson Korea and Confucianism, from students in East Asian and Korean studies to specialists in literary Chinese (hanmun) or East Asian intellectual history.

Content Details

1. Neo-Confucianism ? Korea ? Early works to 1800.

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