Seoul : : Memory, Reinvention, and the Korean Wave / / Ross King.

Seoul is a colossus both in its physical presence and the demand it places on any intellectual effort to understand it. How did it come to be? How can a city this immense work? Underlying its spectacle and incongruities is a city that might be described as ill at ease with its own past. The bitter r...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter DG Plus eBook-Package 2018
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Place / Publishing House:Honolulu : : University of Hawaii Press, , [2018]
©2018
Year of Publication:2018
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (336 p.) :; 60 b&w illustrations
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Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Preface --
CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION: Contested Memory --
CHAPTER 2. ERASURE AND REINVENTION: Korea to 1945 --
CHAPTER 3. RE-IMAG(IN)ING THE NATION: Seoul and Park Chung-hee --
CHAPTER 4. ERASURE AS HERITAGE: Reading Seoul --
CHAPTER 5. NEW CULTURE: Seoul in the Korean Wave --
CHAPTER 6. IMAGINING THE NATION: Reinvention and Its Conditions of Possibility --
Appendix --
Notes --
Glossary --
References --
Index --
About the Author
Summary:Seoul is a colossus both in its physical presence and the demand it places on any intellectual effort to understand it. How did it come to be? How can a city this immense work? Underlying its spectacle and incongruities is a city that might be described as ill at ease with its own past. The bitter rifts of Japanese colonization persist, as does the troubled aftermath of the Korean War and its divisions; the economic "Miracle on the Han" that followed is crosscut by memories of the violent dictatorship that drove it.In Seoul, author Ross King interrogates this contested history and its physical remnants, tacking between the city's historiography and architecture, with attention to monuments, streets, and other urban spaces. The book's structuring device is the dichotomy of erasure and memory as necessary preconditions for reinvention. King traces this phenomenon from the old dynasties to the Japanese regime and wartime destruction; he then follows the equally destructive reinvention of Korea under dictatorship to the brilliant city of the present with its extraordinary explosion of creativity and ideas-the post-1991 Hallyu, the Korean Wave. The final chapter returns to questions of forgetting and memory, but now as "conditions of possibility" for what would seem to underlie the present trajectory of this extraordinary city and culture.Seoul can be read, King suggests, in the context of the hybrid ideas that have characterized Korean cultural history. It may be their present eruption that accounts for the city of contradictions that confronts the contemporary observer and that most extraordinary of Korean phenomena: the rise of an alternative, virtual world, eclipsing both city and nation. Has the very idea of Korea been reinvented even as the weakly defined nation-state slips away?
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780824873318
9783110719550
9783110604252
9783110603255
9783110604030
9783110603149
9783110658118
DOI:10.1515/9780824873318?locatt=mode:legacy
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Ross King.