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Boundless Winds of Empire

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Sixiang Wang demonstrates how Chosŏn political actors strategically deployed cultural practices, values, and narratives to carve out a place for Korea within the Ming imperial order.
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  • 11 July 2023
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Winner, 2025 James B. Palais Prize, Association for Asian Studies

Winner, 2024 UC Berkeley Hong Yung Lee Book Award, Center for Korean Studies at UC Berkeley

For more than two hundred years after its establishment in 1392, the Chosŏn dynasty of Korea enjoyed generally peaceful and stable relations with neighboring Ming China, which dwarfed it in size, population, and power. This remarkably long period of sustained peace was not an inevitable consequence of Chinese cultural and political ascendancy. In this book, Sixiang Wang demonstrates how Chosŏn political actors strategically deployed cultural practices, values, and narratives to carve out a place for Korea within the Ming imperial order.

Boundless Winds of Empire is a cultural history of diplomacy that traces Chosŏn’s rhetorical and ritual engagement with China. Chosŏn drew on classical Chinese paradigms of statecraft, political legitimacy, and cultural achievement. It also paid regular tribute to the Ming court, where its envoys composed paeans to Ming imperial glory. Wang argues these acts were not straightforward affirmations of Ming domination; instead, they concealed a subtle and sophisticated strategy of diplomatic and cultural negotiation. He shows how Korea’s rulers and diplomats inserted Chosŏn into the Ming Empire’s legitimating strategies and established Korea as a stakeholder in a shared imperial tradition. Boundless Winds of Empire recasts a critical period of Sino-Korean relations through the Korean perspective, emphasizing Korean agency in the making of East Asian international relations.

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Price: $35.00
Pages: 456
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Premodern East Asia: New Horizons
Publication Date: 11 July 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231205474
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / Asia / Korea, HISTORY / Asia / China, LITERARY CRITICISM / Asian / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / Diplomacy

Wang has not only laid the theoretical and methodological footings of a new paradigm of diplomatic history, he has opened numerous doors and left them ajar for future scholars to enter.
Sixiang Wang is assistant professor of Asian languages and cultures at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Preface
Chronology
Maps
Introduction: Korea and the Imperial Tradition
Part I: The Shared Past
1. Serving the Great
2. Terms of Authority
Part II: The Practice of Diplomacy
3. Beneath the Veneer
4. In Empire’s Name
Part III: Ecumenical Boundaries
5. Cajoling Empire
6. Representing Korea
7. Contests of Ritual
Part IV: An Empire of Letters
8. The Brilliant Flowers
9. The Envoy’s Virtue
10. The East Does Not Submit
Conclusion: The Myth of Moral Empire
Notes
Bibliography
Index