Ontological complexity of interpolity orders: the encounter between Choson and Tibet in Qing
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Abstract
This article examines the ontological complexity of interpolity orders with a focus on peripheral polities in the Qing order. Existing multiculturalist studies of the Qing order emphasized diverse cultural representations of a single imperial reality, lacking an understanding of multiple realities experienced by peripheral participants. Our analysis reveals the ontological complexity-rather than cultural diversity-of the Qing order, in which multiple ontological agents experienced different lived worlds, from the encounter between Choson Korean envoys and the Tibetan Panchen Lama at Emperor Qianlong's birthday ceremony. By analyzing the Choson envoy member Pak Chiwon's travelog and Tibetan records, we argue that the Choson envoys with Confucian ontology experienced the Panchen Lama as a subhuman, while the Lama experienced the envoys as ignorant lay beings. Observing this ontological dissonance, Pak Chiwon criticized the Qing court's appropriation of peripheral ontologies and proposed experiencing other ontologies to foreground the presence of the pluriverse in the interpolity order. Beyond the Qing, an ontological approach will help reveal heterogeneous lived worlds of interpolity orders and reconceptualize interpolity order under the condition of ontological complexity.