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  • 1
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Honolulu :University of Hawaii Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9961880209502883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (392 p.) : , 5 b&w illustrations
    ISBN: 9780824896201
    Serie: Hawai'i Studies on Korea
    Inhalt: Moral Authoritarianism offers a new perspective on the three modern Korean states—the Japanese colonial state, South Korea, and North Korea—by studying neighborhood associations during the four war decades (1930s–1960s). The existing historiography perceives the three states in relation to imperialism and to the Cold War, thus emphasizing their differences by political changes. By shifting the focus from national policy to local society, this book instead reveals their deep similarities. Neighborhood associations dated back to the premodern Chosŏn period (1392–1910), when they were used to assist local governance. They faded in significance until the colonial government established “patriotic neighborhood associations” in 1938 for its war against China. Through analysis of government documents from the three Koreas and additional sources that include diaries, leaflets, newspapers, and even fiction, Moral Authoritarianism explores neighborhood associations as a site of negotiation between families, local society, and the central government; exposing the moral authoritarian structure present in all three Koreas.Colonial neighborhood associations, tasked with the national mobilization of local Koreans, advanced programs of mass enlightenment that privileged state interests over individual rights, in the process blurring the line between morality and state authority and superimposing patriarchal familial dynamics on societal relations. Despite their different ideological orientations, the neighborhood associations of two postliberation Koreas shared the same enlightenment mission with their earlier forms, and this commonality is critical to understanding the authoritarian direction taken by South and North Korea. The neighborhood association entrusted each state with promoting community-based morality and spirit of voluntarism as an alternative to amoral laissez-faire capitalism and the individual right-based West. Consequently, the state retained its supremacy over the populace at the most basic level of community organization, and Koreans were encouraged to respond to state calls, culminating into two authoritarianisms of the 1970s—Korean style democracy and “our own style” socialism.
    Anmerkung: Frontmatter -- , Contents -- , Tables and Illustrations -- , Acknowledgments -- , Abbreviations -- , Introduction -- , Part I: Patriotic Neighborhood Associations in Colonial Korea -- , 1. The Birth of Patriotic Neighborhood Associations -- , 2. The Colonial Politics of Naming -- , 3. At the Intersection of Family Indoctrination and Opportunities for Women -- , Part II: Citizens’ Neighborhood Associations in South Korea -- , 4. Reborn into Citizens’ Neighborhood Associations -- , 5. The Summer of 1950 -- , 6. The Demise of Local Autonomy during the Postwar Recovery -- , Part III: The Demise of Local Autonomy during the Postwar Recovery -- , 7. Fatherland and People, 1945–1953 -- , 8. Into the Socialist Patriarchal Space -- , 9. “ People’s Neighborhood Associational Life” in the 1960s -- , Epilogue: The Two Constitutional Amendments of December 1972 -- , Notes -- , Bibliography -- , Index -- , About the Author -- , Hawaii Studies on Korea , In English.
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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