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Revisiting Minjung: New Perspectives on the Cultural History of 1980s South Korea
Sunyoung Park, Editor
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An epoch-marking alliance of laborers, students, dissident intellectuals, and ordinary citizens was at the heart of South Korea's transformation from a dictatorship into a vibrant democracy during the 1980s. Collectively known as the minjung ("the people"), these agents of Korean democratization historically carved out an expanded role for civil society in the country's politics. In Revisiting Minjung, some of the foremost experts in 1980s Korean history, literature, film, art, and music provide new insights into one of the most crucial decades in South Korean history. Drawing from the theoretical perspectives of transnationalism, post-Marxist studies, intersectional feminism, popular culture studies, and more, the volume demonstrates how an era that is often associated with radical politics was, in effect, the catalyst for the subsequent flourishing of democratic and liberal values in South Korea.
Revisiting Minjung brings new themes, new subjectivities, and new theoretical perspectives to the study of the rich ecosystem of 1980s Korean culture. Treated here is a wide array of topics, including the origins of minjung ideology, its critique by the right wing, minjung art and music, workers' literary culture, women writers and the resurgence of feminism, erotic cinema, science fiction, transnational political travels, and the representations of race and queerness in 1980s popular culture. The book thus details the origins and development of some of the movements that shape cultural life in South Korea today, and it does so through analyses that engage some of the most pressing debates in current scholarship in Korea and abroad.
Revisiting Minjung brings new themes, new subjectivities, and new theoretical perspectives to the study of the rich ecosystem of 1980s Korean culture. Treated here is a wide array of topics, including the origins of minjung ideology, its critique by the right wing, minjung art and music, workers' literary culture, women writers and the resurgence of feminism, erotic cinema, science fiction, transnational political travels, and the representations of race and queerness in 1980s popular culture. The book thus details the origins and development of some of the movements that shape cultural life in South Korea today, and it does so through analyses that engage some of the most pressing debates in current scholarship in Korea and abroad.
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Cover
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Title Page
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Copyright Page
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction
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Part I. The 1980s in Korean History and Memory
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1. Social Memories of the 1980s
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2. The Irrepressibility of Teleology
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Part II. Transnationalism
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3. In Search of Alternative Modernity
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4. Political Travel at Cold War’s End
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5. Exhibiting Minjung Art Abroad
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Part III. New Labor Culture
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6. Where Have All the “Shouting Stones” Gone?
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7. Indie before Indie
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Part IV. Intersectional Feminism
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8. Bright Constellation
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9. Queering the Dreams of a Third-World Brotherhood
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Part V. Popular Culture
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10. Between Progression and Regression
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11. Reciprocal Assets
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Afterword
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Contributors
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Index
Citable Link
Published: 2019
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
- 978-0-472-05412-1 (paper)
- 978-0-472-07412-9 (hardcover)
- 978-0-472-12515-9 (ebook)