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Koreas Place In The Sun
 
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Koreas Place In The Sun [Paperback]

Bruce Cumings
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)
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Bruce Cumings traces the growth of Korea from a string of competing walled city-states to its present dual nationhood. He examines the ways in which Korean culture has been influenced by Japan and China, and the ways in which it has subtly influenced its more powerful neighbors. Cumings also considers the recent changes in the South, where authoritarianism is giving way to democracy, and in the North, which Cumings depicts as a "socialist corporatist" state more like a neo-Confucian kingdom than a Stalinist regime. Korea's Place in the Sun does much to help Western readers understand the complexities of Korea's past and present. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Cumings's riveting history of modern Korea challenges much received wisdom. Rejecting the verdict of Western historians who support Japan's "modernizing role" in Korea, he characterizes the Japanese occupation (1910-1945) as a callous colonization that fostered underdevelopment, crushed dissent and suppressed indigenous culture. Director of Northwestern University's Center for International and Comparative Studies, the author is highly critical of the U.S. military occupational government (1945-1948), which he blames for bolstering the status quo and laying the groundwork for one of Asia's worst police states. Popular resistance in South Korea, he emphasizes, ultimately transformed an authoritarian regime into a relatively democratic society, while the North, which he has visited extensively, remains a cloistered, family-run, xenophobic garrison state. Yet, drawing on recent scholarship, Cumings argues that North Korea was never a mere Soviet puppet but instead resembled more autonomous communist nations, such as Yugoslavia. His incisive concluding portrait of Korean Americans presents a hardworking, upwardly mobile yet insular, ambivalent group, "in the society but not of it." This spirited, vibrant chronicle is indispensable for understanding modern Korea and its dim prospects for reunification. Photos.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

21 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (4)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (21 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Half of the story, but still not the whole story, Dec 28 2003
By 
"allmacherd" (Clinton Township, MI United States) - See all my reviews
Bruce Cumings book is an excellent read for anyone who is knowledgeable on the subject, but is not the best source for anyone with limited knowledge and experience about the history of the Korean Peninsula. Mr. Cumings' book addresses a number of interesting issues and perspectives not normally addressed or focused on elsewhere, but it is an incomplete history of the Korean Peninsula and their relations with the United States of America. Mr. Cumings is an advocate (and prisoner) of his ideological beliefs, so facts and "claims of facts" that support his viewpoint are embellished, while facts, which do not, are ignored. He is quick to identify and highlight any mistake (real or perceived) of the United States of America, while downplaying or ignoring any misdeeds of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. He is proud of the Korean people, but that pride severely distorts his viewpoint. Because of this fatal flaw I can only access his book a 3-Star rating, but if you belief you already have a good understanding of Korea and its dynamic history in the last century, this is a good book to broaden your understanding of its extremely interesting history. If you are only going to read one book about Korea, this is NOT the one.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An alternative view, Sep 16 2003
By 
Timothy Baker "timabaker" (Sydney, Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
A superb book. A brief overview of Korea's fascinating history, with about half covering pre-1845, and half covering the period since, up until 1997. Some people appear to dismiss the book as too left-wing, but even if you don't agree with Cuming's views you'll be a lot more knowledgeable for having read and thought about them. I personally found it very refreshing to read about opinions that challenge the conventional wisdom on Korea. This book is an essential read for anyone interested in Korea.
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5.0 out of 5 stars a corrective to nationalist propaganda & other simplicities, Sep 2 2003
Korea has a population nearly as big as Germany's, and the South is one of the world's largest economies - often (and misleadingly) cited as a model for other developing countries. The Korean peninsula has seen some of the most intensive and continuous American interference over the past 60 years of anywhere in the world. Today, American belligerence and North Korean obstinancy have pushed the region close to a disastrous conflict. Yet Americans know virtually nothing about this land or its people.

Bruce Cumings's survey of Korean history confronts head-on this ignorance - and many of the preconceptions that go with it. On the one hand, he provides an engrossing and well-written narrative concentrating on the last 150 years of Korean history, informed and enlivened by his own experiences in both North and South. On the other, he sets out to challenge conventional wisdom on several key issues. Other reviewers have referred to Cumings's "leftist bias", but this is much too simple. What Cumings is doing is attacking the unexamined narratives and ideologies of his readers, both American and Korean.

Thus he lays out a sympathetic explanation of the traditional Korean value system, which emphasized hierarchy and the proper relationships between superior and subordinate. He explains Japanese imperialism not as pure and ahistorical evil, but as a process of exploitation that was not only a national catastrophe, but also part of the globe-spanning disruption of existing economic and social relations that we call modernization.

He shows that the Korean war was not an abstract battle between Communism and Freedom, but a very complicated civil war between diverse elements of the left (not only the government of the North, but also independent, grassroots elements seeking local democracy and a fairer distribution of land) and the right (composed mainly of a small section of Japanese collaborators and large landowners who were organized by the US to repress the popular socialist movements in the South). He exposes South Korea's "economic miracle" not as a triumph of democracy and free markets, but of authoritarian state planning. This proved to be both a major accomplishment for the nation and a terrible hardship for those who supplied the labor that made it possible.

Perhaps most challenging for his American readers, Cumings describes the terrible devastation that the US turned on the Korean peninsula during the civil war. Gut-wrenching images of the indiscriminate bombing that leveled the North's urban areas and numerous other atrocities like blowing up dams are contrasted with the cool, rational justifications US officials made for engaging in massive terrorism against the civilians of both North and South.

Cumings's method is to emphasize those realities that are suppressed or denied in mainstream accounts of Korean history. In the midst of the current crisis, where our media and leaders portray North Korea - isolated by the most powerful country in the world and seeking to use what leverage it has to secure guarantees against a US attack - as irrational and aggressive, it might be useful to read accounts that are dismissed as "revisionist" by those seeking to uphold received truths or the purity of "our side".

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