Books on the topic 'South Korea post–war politics'

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1

International Institute for Strategic Studies. Conference. Asia's international role in the Post-Cold War era: Papers from the 34th annual conference of the IISS held inSeoul, South Korea, 9-12 September 1992. London: Brassey's for The International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1993.

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2

T'allaengjŏn'gi Pukhan ŭi taenam chŏngch'aek ŭi sŏngkyŏk yŏn'gu: Chŏngch'esŏng ŭi chŏngch'i wa kwŏllyŏk chŏngch'i ŭi sangho chagyong ŭl chungsim ŭro = A study of characteristics of the North Korean policy toward South Korea during the post-cold war era: focusing on an interaction between identity politics and power politics. 2nd ed. Sŏul-si: Taehan Ch'ulp'ansa, 2011.

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3

North and South Korea. London: Wayland, 2011.

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4

1935-, Kim Samuel S., ed. The North Korean system in the Post-Cold War era. New York: Palgrave, 2001.

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5

Literature and film in Cold War South Korea: Freedom's frontier. New York: Columbia University Press, 2012.

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6

Holden, Charles J. In the great maelstrom: Conservatives in post-Civil War South Carolina. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2002.

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7

Berger, Carl. The Korea knot, a military-political history. New York: Greenwood Press, 1986.

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8

Carl, Berger. The Korea knot: A military-political history. New York: Greenwood Press, 1986.

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9

Acharya, Amitav. A new regional order in South-east Asia: ASEAN in the post-Cold war era. London: Brassey's for the International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1993.

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10

The prosecution of former military leaders in newly democratic nations: The cases of Argentina, Greece, and South Korea. Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Co., 2002.

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11

translator, Na Pyŏng-ch'ŏl, and Hughes Theodore H, eds. Naengjŏn sidae Han'guk ŭi munhak kwa yŏnghwa: Chayu ŭi kyŏnggyesŏn = Literature and film in Cold War South Korea : freedom's frontier. Sŏul-si: Somyŏng Ch'ulp'an, 2013.

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12

Mun, Tae-gŭn. Chungguk ŭi taebuk chŏngch'aek: Chŏngch'aek kyŏlchŏng yoin yŏn'gu = A study on cause of China's policy toward North Korea in the post-cold war era. 8th ed. Sŏul: Nŭlp'um P'ŭllŏsŭ, 2013.

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13

Nation and religion: The politics of commemorations in south-east Poland. Münster: Lit, 2008.

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14

China) International Workshop on the Cold War and the Korean Penninsula (2007 Beijing. International workshop on the cold war and the Korean peninsula: The domestic politics and foreign relations of North and South Korea : Friday, 18 May 2007. Seoul: The Institute for Far Eastern Studies Kyungnam University, 2007.

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15

Conference of the IISS (34th 1992 Seoul, Korea). Conference papers: Asia's international role in the post-cold war era : papers from the 34th Annual Conference of the IISS held in Seoul, South Korea, from 9 to 12 September 1992. London: Brassey's for the International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1993.

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16

Performing South Africa's Truth Commission: Stages of transition. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2010.

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17

Sang-in, Chŏn, ed. Hanʼguk hyŏndaesa: Chinsil kwa haesŏk. Kyŏnggi-do Pʻaju-si: Nanam Chʻulpʻan, 2005.

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18

Lee, Namhee. Memory Construction and the Politics of Time in Neoliberal South Korea. Duke University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478023616.

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In Memory Construction and the Politics of Time in Neoliberal South Korea Namhee Lee explores memory construction and history writing in post-1987 South Korea. The massive neoliberal reconstruction of all aspects of society shifted public discourse from minjung (people) to simin (citizen), from political to cultural, from collective to individual. This shift reconstituted people as Homo economicus, rights-bearing and rights-claiming individuals, even in social movements. Lee explains this shift in the context of simultaneous historical developments: South Korea’s transition to democracy, the end of the Cold War, and neoliberal reconstruction understood as synonymous with democratization. By examining memoirs, biographies, novels, and revisionist conservative historical scholarship, Lee shows how the dominant discourse of a “complete break with the past” erases the critical ethos of previous emancipatory movements foundational to South Korean democracy.
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19

Ahmad, Tahir Naveed, ed. Post Cold War European Order and South Asia. [Karachi]: Area Study Centre for Europe, 1996.

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20

Kim, Charles R. Youth for Nation: Culture and Protest in Cold War South Korea. University of Hawaii Press, 2018.

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21

Kim, Charles R. Youth for Nation: Culture and Protest in Cold War South Korea. University of Hawaii Press, 2017.

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22

Kim, Charles R. Youth for Nation: Culture and Protest in Cold War South Korea. University of Hawaii Press, 2017.

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23

Kim, Charles R. Youth for Nation: Culture and Protest in Cold War South Korea. University of Hawaii Press, 2017.

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24

Youth for Nation: Culture and Protest in Cold War South Korea. University of Hawaii Press, 2017.

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25

Davidson, D., and R. Marcano. Butterfly Wish: A Doomed Interracial Love Affair Set in Post War South Korea. BookBaby, 2017.

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26

Chiang, Min-Hua. Post-Industrial Development in East Asia: Taiwan and South Korea in Comparison. Palgrave Pivot, 2018.

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27

Chiang, Min-Hua. Post-Industrial Development in East Asia: Taiwan and South Korea in Comparison. Palgrave Pivot, 2018.

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28

Hughes, Theodore. Literature and Film in Cold War South Korea: Freedom's Frontier. Columbia University Press, 2012.

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29

Hughes, Theodore. Literature and Film in Cold War South Korea: Freedom's Frontier. Columbia University Press, 2014.

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30

Dinnella-Borrego, Luis-Alejandro. Risen Phoenix: Black Politics in the Post-Civil War South. University of Virginia Press, 2016.

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31

Dinnella-Borrego, Luis-Alejandro. The Risen Phoenix: Black Politics in the Post-Civil War South. University of Virginia Press, 2016.

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32

Rhee, Insoo. Competing Korean elite politics in South Korea after World War II, 1945-1948. 1985.

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33

Brazinsky, Gregg. Nation Building in South Korea: Koreans, Americans, and the Making of a Democracy (The New Cold War History). The University of North Carolina Press, 2009.

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34

Suh, Jae-Jung. Truth and Reconciliation in South Korea: Between the Present and Future of the Korean Wars. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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35

Truth and Reconciliation in South Korea: Between the Present and Future of the Korean Wars. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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36

Suh, Jae-Jung. Truth and Reconciliation in South Korea: Between the Present and Future of the Korean Wars. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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37

Suh, Jae-Jung. Truth and Reconciliation in South Korea: Between the Present and Future of the Korean Wars. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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38

Suh, Jae-Jung. Truth and Reconciliation in South Korea: Between the Present and Future of the Korean Wars. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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39

Berger, Carl. The Korea Knot: A Military-Political History. 2016.

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40

Sakai, Naoki. The End of Pax Americana. Duke University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478022213.

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In The End of Pax Americana, Naoki Sakai focuses on U.S. hegemony's long history in East Asia and the effects of its decline on contemporary conceptions of internationality. Engaging with themes of nationality in conjunction with internationality, the civilizational construction of differences between East and West, and empire and decolonization, Sakai focuses on the formation of a nationalism of hikikomori, or “reclusive withdrawal”—Japan’s increasingly inward-looking tendency since the late 1990s, named for the phenomenon of the nation’s young people sequestering themselves from public life. Sakai argues that the exhaustion of Pax Americana and the post--World War II international order—under which Taiwan, South Korea, Hong Kong, and China experienced rapid modernization through consumer capitalism and a media revolution—signals neither the “decline of the West” nor the rise of the East, but, rather a dislocation and decentering of European and North American political, economic, diplomatic, and intellectual influence. This decentering is symbolized by the sense of the loss of old colonial empires such as those of Japan, Britain, and the United States.
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41

Nation Building in South Korea: Koreans, Americans, and the Making of a Democracy (The New Cold War History). The University of North Carolina Press, 2007.

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42

Roehrig, Terence. Prosecution of Former Military Leaders in Newly Democratic Nations: The Cases of Argentina, Greece, and South Korea. McFarland & Company, 2001.

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43

Jager, Sheila Miyoshi. Brothers at War: The Unending Conflict in Korea. TBS/GBS/Transworld, 2013.

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44

Brothers at War: The unending conflict in Korea. W.W. Norton, 2013.

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45

The politics and economics of the market economy in post-cold war Europe, Lessons for South Asia. Karachi: Area Study Centre for Europe, University of Karachi, 1998.

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46

Macaulay, Alexander. Marching in Step: Masculinity, Citizenship, and The Citadel in Post-World War II America (Politics and Culture in the Twentieth-Century South Ser.). University of Georgia Press, 2011.

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47

Huxford, Grace. The Korean War in Britain. Manchester University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526118950.001.0001.

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The Korean War in Britain explores the social and cultural impact of the Korean War (1950–53) on Britain. Coming just five years after the ravages of the Second World War, Korea was a deeply unsettling moment in post-war British history. When North Korea invaded South Korea in June 1950, Britons worried about a return to total war and the prospect of atomic warfare. As the war progressed, British people grew uneasy about the conduct of the war. From American ‘germ’ warfare allegations to anxiety over Communist use of ‘brainwashing’, the Korean War precipitated a series of short-lived panics in 1950s Britain. But by the time of its uneasy ceasefire in 1953, the war was becoming increasingly forgotten, with more attention paid to England’s cricket victory at the Ashes than to returning troops. Using Mass Observation surveys, letters, diaries and a wide range of under-explored contemporary material, this book charts the war’s changing position in British popular imagination, from initial anxiety in the summer of 1950 through to growing apathy by the end of the war and into the late-twentieth century. Built around three central concepts – citizenship, selfhood and forgetting –The Korean War in Britain connects a critical moment in Cold War history to post-war Britain, calling for a more integrated approach to Britain’s Cold War past. It explores the war a variety of viewpoints – conscript, POW, protestor and veteran – to offer the first social history of this ‘forgotten war’. It is essential reading for anyone interested in Britain’s post-1945 history.
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48

McGuire, James W. The Politics of Development in Latin America and East Asia. Edited by Carol Lancaster and Nicolas van de Walle. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199845156.013.23.

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This article examines the politics of development in Latin America and East Asia, focusing on eight countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, South Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia, and Thailand. It begins by analyzing levels and changes of GDP per capita and income inequality in these countries from 1960 to 2010, showing that the capitalist economies of Latin America grew more slowly and had higher income inequality than their East Asian counterparts. It considers the reasons for this development divergence, including government policies in such areas as land tenure, education, promotion of manufactured exports, and macroeconomic management. The article also looks at historical legacies and social-structural factors that help explain these cross-regional (as well as some intra-regional) policy differences, including colonial heritage, the geopolitical situation after World War II, natural resources, and class structure.
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49

Kim, Jodi. Settler Garrison. Duke University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478022923.

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In Settler Garrison Jodi Kim theorizes how the United States extends its sovereignty across Asia and the Pacific in the post-World War II era through a militarist settler imperialism that is leveraged on debt as a manifold economic and cultural relation undergirded by asymmetries of power. Kim demonstrates that despite being the largest debtor nation in the world, the United States positions itself as an imperial creditor that imposes financial and affective indebtedness alongside a disciplinary payback temporality even as it evades repayment of its own debts. This debt imperialism is violently reproduced in juridically ambiguous spaces Kim calls the “settler garrison”: a colonial archipelago of distinct yet linked military camptowns, bases, POW camps, and unincorporated territories situated across the Pacific from South Korea to Okinawa to Guam. Kim reveals this process through an analysis of how a wide array of transpacific cultural productions creates antimilitarist and decolonial imaginaries that diagnose US militarist settler imperialism while envisioning alternatives to it.
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50

Lavender III, Isiah, ed. Dis-Orienting Planets. University Press of Mississippi, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496811523.001.0001.

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Dis-Orienting Planets: Racial Representations of Asia in Science Fiction continues where Black and Brown Planets: The Politics of Race in Science Fiction (2014) left off. This anthology features essays depicting Asia and Asians in science fiction literature, film, and fandom with particular attention paid to China, Japan, India, and Korea. The collection concentrates on political representations of Asian identity in science fiction’s imagination, from fear of the Yellow Peril and its host of stereotypes to techno-Orientalism and the remains of a post-colonial heritage. In fact, Dis-Orienting Planets engages the extremely negative and racist connotations of “orientalism” that obscure time, place, and identity perceptions of Asians, so-called yellow and brown peoples, in this historically white genre, provokes debate on the pervading imperialistic terminologies, and reconfigures the study of race in science fiction. In this respect, the title “disses” culturally inaccurate representations of the eastern hemisphere. In three parts, the seventeen collected essays consider the racial politics governing the renewed visibility of the Orient in science fiction. The first part emphasizes the interpretive challenges of science fictional meetings between the East and West by investigating entwined racial and political tensions. The second part concentrates on the tropes of Yellow Peril and techno-Orientalism, where fear of and desire for Orientalized futures generate racial anxiety and war. The third section explores technologized Asian subjectivities in the eco-critical spaces of mainland China, the Pacific Rim, the Korean peninsula, and the Indian subcontinent. Clearly, our future visions must absolutely include all people of color.
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