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E-grāmata: Two Koreas and their Global Engagements

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030907617
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030907617

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This book departs from existing studies by focusing on the impact of international influences on the society, culture, and language of both North and South Korea. Since President Kim Young Sam’s segyehwa drive of the mid-1990s, South Korea has become a model for successful globalization. In contrast, North Korea is commonly considered one of the least internationally integrated countries. This characterization fails to account for the reality of the two Koreas and their global engagements. The opening essay situates the chapters by highlighting some significant contrasts and commonalities between the experiences of North and South Korea’s history of engagement with the world beyond the Peninsula. The chapters explore both the longer-term historical influence of Korea’s international contacts as well as specific Korean cultural, linguistic, and social developments that have occurred since the 1990s demise of the global Cold War and greater international integration.

1 The Two Koreas and Their Global Engagements
1(34)
Andrew David Jackson
Part I Film
2 The Dictator's Daughter and the Rising Sun: Scars of Colonialism in South Korean Cinema During the Park Geun-hye Era
35(24)
Russell Edwards
3 Fighting "The Man": The Production of Historical Knowledge in Cho Kun-hyon's 26 Years
59(24)
Niall McMahon
4 Squaring the Circle: The Schoolgirl's Diary and North Korean Film in the Era of Marketization
83(34)
Andrew David Jackson
Part II Music
5 Singing Through Impossible Modernization: Sopyonje and National Cinema in the Era of Globalization
117(24)
Seung-hwan Shin
6 Valorizing the Old: Honoring Aging Practitioners of Korean Traditions
141(20)
Roald Maliangkay
7 The Transmedial Aesthetics of K-Pop Music Videos: References to Western Film Cultures
161(26)
Ute Fendler
Part III Transformed Language
8 Korean Language, Power, and National Identity
187(36)
Young-Key Kim-Renaud
9 Swearing Granny Restaurants: An International Perspective on Rudeness in Korean
223(36)
Soyeon Kim
Lucien Brown
Part IV Society and Space
10 Korean "Multicultural Literature" and Discourses About Koreanness
259(30)
Andreas Schirmer
11 Realizing "Filiality Rights'": The Role of Filial Piety in Localizing Human Rights in the Contemporary Korean Context
289(22)
Hong-Jae Park
12 Natural Consequences for Koreans in Japan: The Fluid Nature of the Identity Formation of Chongryon Koreans
311(26)
Min Hye Cho
13 North Korea All at Sea: Aspiration, Subterfuge, and Engagement in a Global Commons, 2020, Dark Fleets and Empty Streets
337(26)
Robert Winstanley-Chesters
Index 363
Andrew David Jackson is currently Associate Professor of Korean Studies at Monash University, Melbourne. Before this, he taught Korean Studies at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. He obtained his Ph.D. in Korean history from the School of Oriental and African Studies, the University of London, in 2011, and he wrote a dissertation on the Musin rebellion of 1728. As well as premodern history, Andrew is interested in modern Korean history and society, North and South Korean film, and theories of rebellion and revolution.