This study examines the long-overlooked institution of slavery in Korea, challenging its erasure from historical narratives and reassessing its role within the country's socio-political structure. It explores how slavery, deeply embedded in a lineage-based aristocracy, functioned not only as an economic driver but also as a hereditary status system that reinforced elite dominance and self-preservation. Using the concept of "servile society" (a society in which strong asymmetrical dependency is linked to hereditary social status in law and custom), the book examines how hereditary dependency shaped elite power, governance, and social hierarchies over centuries. The study combines political and legal history, social structures, and ideological frameworks to present the latest research on slavery in ancient Korea. It examines how slaves were constructed as a "special species" in the Korean Middle Ages, analyzes the role of slavery in the yangban-dominated society of the early modern period based on political-intellectual discourses and statistical data, and tracks the expansion of slavery discourses in Japanese and Western reception after c. 1800 based on texts and photographs; and examines the aftermath of slavery in the present.
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Illustrationen
47
28 s/w Abbildungen, 47 s/w Tabellen
28 b/w ill., 47 b/w tbl.
Dateigröße
ISBN-13
978-3-11-221038-3 (9783112210383)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Reinhard Zöllner, University of Bonn, Germany.