[KS] Confucianism and economic development (A bibliographic s uggestion)

Bretzke, James JBRETZKE at JSTB.EDU
Sun Feb 9 23:15:07 EST 2003


I might suggest some of the references in my annotated research
bibliography:  Bibliography on East Asian Religion and Philosophy (Mellen,
2002).  I have a section there Business and Economic Ethics in Asia (pp.
223- 230), plus the index is fairly extensive for other topics.  There are a
considerable number of sections and entries that deal with aspects of
Confucianism as well.
 
James T. Bretzke

-----Original Message-----
From: Vladimir Tikhonov [mailto:vladimir.tikhonov at east.uio.no]
Sent: Sunday, February 09, 2003 8:26 AM
To: Koreanstudies at koreaweb.ws
Subject: Re: [KS] Confucianism and economic development


I am also not sure how relevant my advice will be to your advisee's inquiry,
but I would suggest that reading some of the works by South Korean
proponents of the "Asian Values" theory might be of certain help. This group
of extremely conservative scholars - most of them,surprisingly, with
American educational credentials - suggests that what is usually identified
as "social evil" in South Korea (regionalism, culture of informal networking
known as "yOnjul", etc.) is, indeed, a valuable part of "Confucian culture",
which gave Korea some advantage over its competitors. Web page of one of
them, Lew Seok-Choon from Yonsei Un-ty ( http
<http://suny.yonsei.ac.kr/~sclew/> ://suny.yonsei.ac.kr /%7Esclew/
<http://suny.yonsei.ac.kr/~sclew/> ), seems to contain some English as well.
Other prominent one is Ham Chaebong (  <http://polisci.yonsei.ac.kr/~cbhahm>
http://polisci.yonsei.ac.kr/%7Ecbhahm). Frankly, I would not cite their
works without certain reservations because political bias is all too
obvious, but as a particular kind of pseudo-Confucian socio-political
ideology that may be of some interest as an object for study.

V.Tikhonov  

  







At 13:56 07.02.2003 -0700, you wrote:


I am not sure how much relevance it would have, but here is something that
your advisee might find interesting.

Hoyt Tillman, Business as a Vocation: The Autobiography of Mr. Wu Ho-su.
Havard University Press, 2002.  This is Prof. Tillman's translation (with an
introduction and epilogue) of Huang Chin-shing's Ban shiji de fendou: Wu
Huoshi xiansheng koushu zhuanji (Taibei: Yunchen wenhua gongsi, 1990).  Mr.
Wu Ho-su is a Taiwanese businessman.  Here is a short introduction from the
web site of Harvard University Press:

-------------------------------
Wu Ho-Su (1919-1986) pioneered business ventures ranging from cloth and
synthetic fiber industries to department stores and life insurance. This son
of a crippled former coolie began as a laborer for a Japanese
cloth-importing company in the 1930s, but eventually became a manager and
then an independent entrepreneur. Overcoming business obstacles in Chiang
Kai-shek's Nationalist-ruled Taiwan after 1945, Mr. Wu painstakingly built
Shinkong into Taiwan's sixth-largest business enterprise by the 1980s. This
account of Wu Ho-Su's life, developed by Mr. Wu working directly with Dr.
Huang Chin-shing of the Academia Sinica, one of Taiwan's most distinguished
historians, is instructive for the lessons it offers about both business
practices in East Asia and their interplay with Confucian values. The book
recounts with graphic examples the changing role of family and other
networks in Taiwan's economic "miracle" and in the region more generally.
The blend that Mr. Wu evidenced of business acumen and concern for
Confucianism, in turn, raises broader questions of the type that scholars
and businesspeople have strenuously debated since the time of Max Weber
about the compatibility of Confucian norms and modern business practices.

-----------------------------------------

Best,

Young Kyun Oh
Instructor of Korean
Arizona State University
Dept. of Languages and Literatures
(480)727-7447
http://www.asu.edu/clas/dll/kor/korean.html
<http://www.asu.edu/clas/dll/kor/korean.html> 
http://www.learnkorean.com <http://www.learnkorean.com/> 
----- Original Message -----
From: "Morgan Pitelka" <mpitelka at oxy.edu>
To: <Koreanstudies at koreaweb.ws>
Sent: Tuesday, February 04, 2003 2:17 PM
Subject: [KS] Confucianism and economic development


>
> Dear Colleagues,
>
> One of my advisees is conducting research on the connection between
> Confucianism and economic development in postwar South Korea. He is
> interested in both practice and discourse. In other words, he is not
> assuming that the connection always exists and is important, but rather
> expects that in many examples the rhetoric of Confucianism became a
> corporate and state tool in the attempt to construct certain kinds of
> identities and encourage certain kinds of behavior.
>
> The problem he is encountering is a plethora of vague references to the
> Confucian-development connection (particularly in discussions of the
> chaebol) combined with a lack of specific evidence.
>
> Can anyone suggest materials that might be useful in the study of this
> issue? Interviews, case studies, diaries, corporate PR, etc.? I've pasted
> the basic reading list he is working with at this point to the bottom of
> this message. (I am a specialist in East Asian premodern ceramics and
> cultural history, and thus out of my depth when it comes to modern
economic
> history.)
>
> Thanks,
>
> Morgan
>
> *****************
> Morgan Pitelka
> Asian Studies Department
> 408 Johnson Hall
> Occidental College
> 1600 Campus Road
> Los Angeles, CA 90041
> 1-323-259-1421
> mailto:mpitelka at oxy.edu <mailto:mpitelka at oxy.edu> 
> *****************
>
> Amsden, Alice. Asia's Next Giant: South Korea and Late Industrialization.
> Oxford, 1989.
>
> Borthwick, Mark. The Pacific Century: The Emergence of Modern Pacific
Asia.
> Westview, 1992.
>
> Brook, Timothy and H.V. Luong. Culture and Economy: The Shaping of
> Capitalism in Eastern Asia. Michigan, 1997.
>
> Chung Kae H. and H.C. Lee. Korean Managerial Dynamics. Praeger, 1989.
>
> Cummings, Bruce. Korea's Place in the Sun: A Modern History. Norton, 1997.
>
> Das, Dilip K. Korean Economic Dynamism. St. Martin's Press, 1992.
>
> Kim, Eun M. Big Business, Strong State: Collusion and Conflict in South
> Korean Development, 1960-1990. State University of New York, 1997
>
> Steers, Richard M. Made in Korea: Chung Ju Yung and the Rise of Hyundai.
> Routledge, 1999.
>
> Tai, Hung-chao. Confucianism and Economic Development: An Oriental
> Alternative? Washington Institute Press, 1989.
>
> Ungson, Gerardo R., R.M. Steers, and S.H. Park. Korean Enterprise: The
Quest
> for Globalization. Harvard Business School, 1997.
>
>
>

Vladimir Tikhonov,
Department of East European and Oriental Studies,
Faculty of Arts,
University of Oslo,
P.b. 1030, Blindern, 0315, Oslo, Norway.
Fax: 47-22854140; Tel: 47-22857118
Personal web page:
http://www.geocities.com/volodyatikhonov/volodyatikhonov.html
<http://www.geocities.com/volodyatikhonov/volodyatikhonov.html> 
Electronic classrooms: East Asian/Korean Society and Politics:
                       http://www.geocities.com/uioeastasia2002/main.
<http://www.geocities.com/uioeastasia2002/main.html>  html
<http://www.geocities.com/uioeastasia2002/main.html> 
                       East Asian/Korean Religion and Philosophy:
                       http://
<http://www.geocities.com/uioeastasia2003/classroom.html> www.geocities.com
/uioeastasia2003/classroom.html
<http://www.geocities.com/uioeastasia2003/classroom.html> 


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