Samguksagi was a historiography on ancient Korean Three Kingdoms which, until mid 6th century, had not established their firm mutual standing. 'Dongyizhuan' or 'Account of the Eastern Barbarians' in English held in Sanguozhi and other Chinese historio...
Samguksagi was a historiography on ancient Korean Three Kingdoms which, until mid 6th century, had not established their firm mutual standing. 'Dongyizhuan' or 'Account of the Eastern Barbarians' in English held in Sanguozhi and other Chinese historiographies, also, was a by-product which was brought forth in the process of contemporary Chinese construction of their histories. As other political entities than three kingdoms treated themselves as dependent variables to the evolution of histories of the Kingdoms, so Eastern Barbarians' political ones left their remains in the historiographies of Chinese dynasties as just an evidence to verify China-centered world view. This constitutes the reason that we need to pay full heed to the internal logics and the logical validities of so-called 'early accounts' in Samguksagi and the accounts on the Three Kingdoms in Sanguozhi and other Chinese historiographies. While checking their logics and validities, we should be as much sharp at each account as at other ones. Also, we should be always attentive to their references and contexts.
Especially in the case of Samguksagi, numberless fallacies, confusions, and doubts we meet in the historiography came not from 'hidden purpose' but from its blind regard to, and scanty critiques of, historical materials. Given this, we should be careful lest our critiques of informations in Samguksagi offers to us should return back to materialism in its paradoxical use. So-called 'early accounts' were just an 'description' drafted before established 'explanation'. I believe that after full appreciation of internal logics of contemporary explanation does the new critiques hit the mark. Of course, we cannot exclude the possibility that intended purpose under the lurks explanatory layers in tiers. Nevertheless, even the purpose which defies our examination may be hidden in the accounts of personal lineage or of happenings not in the writings of certain chronological accounts.
More than anything else, we should be careful to 'objectivity' while thinking of and explaining history. The objectivity scholars take proud of but in conflict may be the cover-up of their frail subjectivity. Rather, it will pave the objective paths to our academism that we take into careful account the subjective boundary of historiographers in their contemporary perspectives. When we have in mind their ideas and ideations, we can have an access to the past conceived by history writers. Through the access can we meet 'the past as a fact'. In the meantime, we should have rather lengthy reservation about the conviction of historical verifiability. The informations inherent in historiographies remain no more than grounds on which to stand for/against a historical explanation. Accordingly, historiographies do not carry the responsibility of verifying their accounts although scholars bear the burden of exploiting historiographies and their informations for a new and free explanation.