
Korea and Its Futures: Unification and the Unfinished War
Roy Grinker$46.74
$54.99
Despite the passage of over forty years since the official end of the civil war in Korea, the north and the south sections of the country remain technically at war. In Korea and its Futures, Roy Grinker argues that the continued conflict between North and South Korea, and the prospects for peace on the Korean peninsula, must be understood within the broader social and cultural contexts in which Koreans live. Grinker suggests that a fundamental obstacle to peace on the peninsula is that South Korea has become a nation in which nearly all aspects of economic, political, and cultural identity are defined in opposition to North Korea. He further demonstrates that in spite of its status as a sacred goal for all Koreans, the idea of unification threatens the world in which almost every South Korean has been born and raised. In chapters on defectors, divided families, student protests, and early education, Grinker reveals how South Korean conceptions of unification prevent either side from recognizing that a unified Korea must also be a diverse Korea. In other words, Grinker points out, unification is largely perceived by South Koreans not as the integration of different identities but as the southern conquest and assimilation of the north - in short, as winning the war.
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan
Published: 04/14/1998
ISBN: 9780312210915
Pages: 316
Weight: 1.10lbs
Size: 8.57h x 5.82w x 1.15d
Review Citations: Library Journal 06/01/1998 pg. 133
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan
Published: 04/14/1998
ISBN: 9780312210915
Pages: 316
Weight: 1.10lbs
Size: 8.57h x 5.82w x 1.15d
Review Citations: Library Journal 06/01/1998 pg. 133
