Inactive or defunct Inactive or defunct Koreacentrism (also, Korea-centrism[1]) is an ethnocentric perspective that regards Korea to be central or unique relative to other countries and holds that Korean people and culture are superior to others.
[1] It encompasses traditional views of Korea as the center of the world (axis mundi) and Koreans as the "chosen people" (for example, according Unification Church's reading of the Book of Revelation, when Jesus returns in the Second Coming, he will be Korean[4]).
[2] In the wider Asian context this view has been also associated with the "Little China" ideology (Sojunghwa).
[5][6] Korea-centrism has been linked with some elements of the Protestantism in South Korea (such as Korean Christian Zionism), and Korean missionary initiatives, which some Korean pastors and Christian activists (such as Paul Choi) have argued are more efficient and should be prioritized compared to American missionary activities.
[1] North Korean Juche ideology has also been described as Korea-centric.