View : 657 Download: 0

Post-democracy and historicism: The hidden origin of the Korea-Japan trade war

Title
Post-democracy and historicism: The hidden origin of the Korea-Japan trade war
Authors
Yun J.-W.
Ewha Authors
윤지환
SCOPUS Author ID
윤지환scopus
Issue Date
2021
Journal Title
Issues and Studies
ISSN
1013-2511JCR Link
Citation
Issues and Studies vol. 57, no. 1
Keywords
HistoricismLegitimacyNeoliberalizationPost-democracyThe korea-Japan trade war
Publisher
World Scientific
Indexed
SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Since Japan's imposition of export controls against Korea in July 2019 and its following countermoves, including the termination of the General Security of Military Information Agreement, the governments of both countries have presented their own narratives of the origin of this trade war, both of which mirror theories of international politics. Nonetheless, these narratives mask several domestic origins. Most importantly, this paper demonstrates that behind the trade war, there has been a preoccupation of the two governments with mutually irreconcilable version forms of historicism. One is Korea's pro-naturalist historicism, seeing Korean history as being preordained by the universal laws of human progress and defining Japan as a historical reactionary. The other is Japan's anti-naturalist historicism, upholding internationalism as a new driving force of history that will transform Japan from a war criminal state into a proper subject in international society while criticizing Korea as being a drag on this transformation. This paper argues that, resulting from decades-long neoliberal politics that have disturbed the state-society balance, the national structure of post-democracy has encouraged each government to push historicism to its limit as an alternative source of political legitimacy in lieu of democratic accountability. Concretely, it shows that postdemocracy has determined (1) the historicist framing of emerging conflicts, (2) the government's legislative struggles to realize historicist policies, and (3) the incontestability of historicist hostility by other ideas in each country. © 2021 World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.
DOI
10.1142/S101325112150003X
Appears in Collections:
사회과학대학 > 정치외교학전공 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE