Literature and Film in Cold War South Korea

Literature and Film in Cold War South Korea

Freedom's Frontier

  • Author: Hughes, Theodore
  • Publisher: Columbia University Press
  • ISBN: 9780231157483
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780231500715
  • Place of publication:  New York , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2012
  • Month: March
  • Language: English
Korean writers and filmmakers crossed literary and visual cultures in multilayered ways under Japanese colonial rule (1910–1945). Taking advantage of new modes and media that emerged in the early twentieth century, these artists sought subtle strategies for representing the realities of colonialism and global modernity. Theodore Hughes begins by unpacking the relations among literature, film, and art in Korea's colonial period, paying particular attention to the emerging proletarian movement, literary modernism, nativism, and wartime mobilization. He then demonstrates how these developments informed the efforts of post-1945 writers and filmmakers as they confronted the aftershocks of colonialism and the formation of separate regimes in North and South Korea.

Hughes puts neglected Korean literary texts, art, and film into conversation with studies on Japanese imperialism and Korea's colonial history. At the same time, he locates post-1945 South Korean cultural production within the transnational circulation of texts, ideas, and images that took place in the first three decades of the Cold War. The incorporation of the Korean Peninsula into the global Cold War order, Hughes argues, must be understood through the politics of the visual. In Literature and Film in Cold War South Korea, he identifies ways of seeing that are central to the organization of a postcolonial culture of division, authoritarianism, and modernization.
  • CONTENTS
  • LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS vii
  • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix
  • INTRODUCTION 1
  • 1. VISUALITY AND THE COLONIAL MODERN: The Technics of Proletarian Culture, Nativism, Modernism, and Mobilization 19
  • 2. VISIBLE AND INVISIBLE STATES: Liberation, Occupation, Division 61
  • 3. AMBIVALENT ANTICOMMUNISM: The Politics of Despair and the Erotics of Language 91
  • 4. DEVELOPMENT AS DEVOLUTION: Overcoming Communism and the “Land of Excrement” Incident 129
  • 5. RETURN TO THE COLONIAL PRESENT: Translation, Collaboration, Pan-Asianism 165
  • POSTSCRIPT 205
  • NOTES 211
  • SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 245
  • INDEX 259

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