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Past Forward: Essays in Korean History
Past Forward: Essays in Korean History
Past Forward: Essays in Korean History
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Past Forward: Essays in Korean History

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A wide-ranging collection of concise essays, ‘Past Forward’ introduces core features of Korean history that illuminate current issues and pressing concerns, including recent political upheavals, social developments and cultural shifts. Adapted from Kyung Moon Hwang’s regular columns in the ‘Korea Times’ of Seoul, the essays forward interpretative points concerning historical debates and controversies in order to generate thinking about the ongoing impact of the past on the present, and vice versa: how Korea’s present circumstances reflect and shape the evolving understanding of its past. In taking the reader on a compelling journey through history, ‘Past Forward’ paints a distinctive, fascinating portrait of Korea and Koreans both yesterday and today.

Containing both extensive chronological and subject tables of contents, the essays are grouped into themes demonstrating a particular facet of the recurring connections between the past and the present. In addition, the book contains a timeline of contents that situates the essays in chronological context and a subject index. While all the self-contained essays introduce particular facets of Korean history and society, they are free of jargon and written for the general reader.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherAnthem Press
Release dateJan 16, 2019
ISBN9781783088812
Past Forward: Essays in Korean History
Author

Kyung Moon Hwang

Kyung Moon Hwang is a professor of history and East Asian languages and cultures at the University of Southern California. He is the author of A History of Korea: An Episodic Narrative and Beyond Birth: Social Status in the Emergence of Modern Korea and coeditor of Contentious Kwangju: The May 18 Uprising in Korea’s Past and Present.

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    Past Forward - Kyung Moon Hwang

    Past Forward

    Past Forward

    Essays in Korean History

    Kyung Moon Hwang

    Anthem Press

    An imprint of Wimbledon Publishing Company

    www.anthempress.com

    This edition first published in UK and USA 2019

    by ANTHEM PRESS

    75–76 Blackfriars Road, London SE1 8HA, UK

    or PO Box 9779, London SW19 7ZG, UK

    and

    244 Madison Ave #116, New York, NY 10016, USA

    [© Kyung Moon Hwang 2019]

    [The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.]

    All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above,

    no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or introduced into

    a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means

    (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise),

    without the prior written permission of both the copyright

    owner and the above publisher of this book.

    British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

    A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

    ISBN-13: 978-1-78308-878-2 (Hbk)

    ISBN-10: 1-78308-878-8 (Hbk)

    ISBN-13: 978-1-78308-879-9 (Pbk)

    ISBN-10: 1-78308-879-6 (Pbk)

    This title is also available as an e-book.

    CONTENTS

    List of Figures

    Foreword

    Chronologies of Korean History

    Themes

    Acknowledgments

    Note on Romanization and Spelling

    Part I Circulating History

    1.Recycling Names for Korea

    2.Toppling Tyrants

    3.Religion and Secularism

    4.Commemorating the Comfort Women

    5.May 16 and May 18

    6.Tragedy and Farce

    7.Generational Renewal

    Part II Durable Traditions

    8.Marking the New Year

    9.Slavery, Bondage, and Social Hierarchy

    10.Marriage, Adultery, and Concubinage

    11.Buddhism and Korean Identity

    12.Christianity’s Rapid Rise

    13.Civil–Military Balance in Politics

    14.Regionalism in Elections

    15.Yeongnam’s Strong Presidential Politics

    Part III Ancient Remains

    16.The Beginnings of Korean History

    17.Ancient and Present Gaya

    18.Empress Gi

    19.Speaking of Northern Korea, not North Korea

    Part IV Dynastic Depths

    20.Currency and National Identity

    21.Concubine Descendants

    22.The Real Lives of Gisaeng Courtesans

    23.A Shocking Execution

    Part V Modern Origins

    24.Jungin, Forerunners to Professionals

    25.1894, a Signal Year

    26.Great Korean Empire

    27.March First Independence Movement

    28.The Politics of Disease

    29.Korean Universities

    Part VI Challenges of Nationhood

    30.Korea’s Past in Light of Brexit

    31.Openness and Exclusion

    32.The North Korean View of History

    33.Another Way to View National Division

    34.The First National Assembly Elections

    35.Who Started the Korean War?

    36.Textbooks and Competing Nationalist Histories

    37.The Complexities of Memorial Day

    38.Adoption’s Spotlight on Korean History

    39.Questioning Monuments

    40.Taking Ownership of the Past

    Part VII History Makers

    41.Demythologizing King Sejong the Great

    42.Modern Lady Shin Saimdang

    43.Five Potential National Heroes

    44.A Portrait of Great Painters

    45.Four Young Men from 1884

    46.Na Hye-seok

    47.Hyundai Motors and Chung Ju-yung

    48.Yun Isang and the East Berlin Case

    49.Ri Young-hee, Iconoclast for Democracy

    50.Kim Young Sam’s Broad Historical Appeal

    51.Kim Dae Jung’s Historic Election

    Part VIII External Presences

    52.Korea’s Complicated Relationship with China

    53.How Chinese was Chinese History?

    54.Tiananmen and the Power of History

    55.Lotte between Korea and Japan

    56.Comfort Women Beholden to History

    57.A Modest Proposal for Dokdo

    58.The General Sherman Incident of 1866

    59.Depictions of the United States

    60.Overcoming Old Views of Korea–United States Ties

    61.Foreign Language Dependency

    Part IX Trials of Modernization

    62.Summer Symmetries

    63.The Korean War as a Turning Point

    64.The Students of April

    65.The Four Ds of South Korean History

    66.Two Assassinations

    67.Roads to Revolution

    68.Dramatizations of the Gwangju Uprising

    69.The Great Labor Uprising of 1987

    Part X Gripped by the Past

    70.Natural Disasters and the False Wisdom of the Past

    71.Royal Dangers

    72.North Korea’s Alternative History

    73.Origins of Korea’s Political Corruption

    74.Anti-Communism’s Powerful Hold

    75.Fraudulent Captains of the Sewol Ferry Disaster

    76.Overcoming Past Hierarchies

    77.Gripped by the Authoritarian Mindset

    78.Ways of Living History

    Index

    Figures

    4.1Original comfort woman statue in front of the Japanese Embassy, Seoul

    4.2Replica comfort woman statue in front of the former Japanese consulate building, Mokpo, South Korea

    11.1Jogyesa Temple in downtown Seoul

    11.2Bulguksa Temple, Gyeongju, South Korea

    11.3Wooden Blocks of the Tripitaka Koreana, Haeinsa Temple, South Korea

    17.1Entrance to the Gaya Theme Park, Gimhae, South Korea

    19.1Replica of the stele, in Manchuria, commemorating the exploits of King Gwanggaeto

    20.1The four South Korean paper bills, featuring Toegye (Yi Hwang), King Sejong the Great, Sin Saimdang, and Yulgok (Yi I)

    20.2Statue of Yulgok, Ojukheon Museum, Gangneung, South Korea

    23.1Section of the wall of Suwon Fortress, originally built in the late eighteenth century to commemorate Prince Sado

    23.2Statue of King Jeongjo, Suwon Fortress, Suwon, South Korea

    25.1Bronze statue of Jeon Bongjun, leader of the Donghak forces of 1894, next to a subway entrance, downtown Seoul

    27.1Pagoda Park, site of the initial public reading of the March First Declaration of Independence, downtown Seoul

    27.2Reenactment of March First demonstrations on the grounds of a local high school, Busan, South Korea

    28.1Ji Seog-yeong

    28.2Baek In-je

    35.1Memorial to the Korean War’s Battle of White Horse Hill, Cheorwon, South Korea

    37.1Gravesites in the National Cemetery (Hyeonchungwon), southern Seoul

    37.2Memorial statue and fountain at the entrance to the National Cemetery

    39.1Entrance to the Independence Hall museum complex, Cheonan, South Korea

    39.2A display within Independence Hall

    41.1Statue of Jang Yeong-sil, legendary inventor from the King Sejong era

    42.1Statue of Sin Saimdang, Ojukheon Museum, Gangneung, South Korea

    43.1Yu Gil-jun

    43.2An Chang-ho

    43.3Choe Yong-sin

    43.4Han Yong-un

    45.1The four leaders of the 1884 coup (from left): Bak Yeong-ho, Seo Gwang-beom, Seo Jae-pil, Gim Ok-gyun

    46.1Na Hye-seok

    49.1Ri Young-hee

    55.1Lotte World Tower, southeastern Seoul

    56.1Exhibit on Comfort Stations, National Memorial Museum of Forced Mobilization, Busan, South Korea

    60.1Memorial plaque in dedication to the UN forces who participated in the Korean War

    64.1Entrance to the April 19th Memorial Hall, downtown Seoul

    68.1May 18 National Cemetery, Gwangju, South Korea

    77.1Commemorative photo of President Park Chung Hee at the 1970 groundbreaking ceremony

    Foreword

    How does Korean history connect the past to the present? This question runs through the current collection of short essays, which are adapted from a dedicated newspaper column, Korean Historical Sense, that I wrote for The Korea Times of Seoul from 2014 to 2017.

    As a historian I fully recognize the past as valuable in itself, without necessarily a connection to today. But it was not my charge in this column just to illuminate interesting features of Korean history, but rather to consider how history informs a range of current concerns, from national identity to the overlaps between Korea and other cultures. The universalities, then, as well as the particularities of Koreans’ historical experience encourage thinking about the impact of the country’s past, and especially about the perception of that past, today.

    Therefore, a focus on the development of historical understanding, or in other words, on the history of historical views, serves as this book’s unifying theme. It seeks to gauge the constant dialogue between Korea’s history, from its beginnings to the most recent developments, and Korea’s present—an exercise that entails not only considering how the past informs the present, but just as importantly, how the present affects the past. In such a dynamic, then, the present moves backward as much as the past moves forward.

    And because this was a newspaper column, I often attempted to let a current concern trigger the historical topic to explore. Some of these original references have been removed in this volume so that it can function as a stand-alone collection of essays, but it will be clear to the reader that many themes, from politics to culture and international relations, are covered. But all of these essays are undergirded by the core idea that the elasticity of history stretches to transcend barriers in time as well as place.

    The essays are divided into ten thematic Parts that all illustrate this general idea. The sections do not appear in any particular order, although the essays within each part are presented somewhat chronologically. Readers who wish to place each essay in the flow of major periods and events are encouraged to consult the chronological and thematic tables of contents at the beginning of the book.

    Taken together, the essays forward the following points of emphasis, which amount to a personal ideology of history: First, as a teacher of history I aim to demystify and, if necessary, dismantle history, particularly in regards to the myths and heroes that suffuse every nation’s received historical understanding, not just Korea’s. In line with this motive, it is important also to shatter romanticized, glorified impressions of the past, such as those associated with and promoted by the royalty, clergy, aristocracy and other dominant elites of yesterday. To paraphrase from one of the essays, the wisdom of the past was not always so wise.

    A related point is that, as a historian, I actually wish to de-emphasize history. History is important, of course, but popular or conventional historical understanding is often a product of manipulation, even fabrication, on the part of political and cultural actors. This, too, is not unique to Korea, and the connections in this regard to other countries are very informative. The most egregious examples, though, are arguably from North Korea, and it is critical to understand why and how this state’s distorted obsessions with history resulted from Koreans’ common concerns and experiences.

    To escape the clutch of the past, then, is one of the major challenges and rewards of studying history in the first place. Gaining freedom and relief from recurringly damaging historical patterns and behaviors is crucial, but it is just as important to break away from cherished ways of thinking about the past as an unshakable determinant of the present or the future, whether on a personal, social or national level. This, too, is a universal phenomenon, but in Korea, due to the citizenry’s strong historical consciousness, there remains a particularly large potential to fall victim to this process, as well as to gain the rewards of escaping it.

    This point was demonstrated well by the developments of 2016 and 2017, highlighted by the demonstrations of millions in the streets, which led to the ouster of South Korea’s president, Park Geun-hye, the daughter of a former dictator as well as a representative of powerful interests from South Korea’s authoritarian past. That, at least, is how I interpreted the deeper impulses behind those extraordinary events—as ultimately a confrontation between opposing forces and perspectives of history as much as anything else. As the reader of this volume will undoubtedly notice, such circumstances presented an unavoidable, compelling and particularly rich source of understanding for a full range of historical considerations.

    It is my hope that the prevalence of such personal perspectives will not appear overwhelming or distracting, and that regardless of where one stands in relation to the author’s positions, the reader will find the essays thought-provoking as well as instructive, and hence worthwhile.

    Chronologies of Korean History

    Political Eras

    Major Events

    Themes

    Acknowledgments

    I wish first to acknowledge the assistance and professionalism of Tej P.S. Sood, Abi Pandey, and the rest of the editorial and production team at Anthem Press. I also thank The Korea Times, in particular Chang-Sup Lee, Yoon Bae Park, and Young-Jin Oh for their diligence and care and for providing permission to use several of the images in this volume. Finally, many thanks to my family, fellow Asianists at USC and around the world who have offered encouragement, and especially my students at USC who have inspired me to pursue my calling as an educator, broadly conceived.

    Note on Romanization and Spelling

    This book uses the Revised Romanization System of Korean, with the exception of certain political figures with well-known spellings otherwise, the city of Pyongyang, and the surname Sin, which is rendered as Shin.

    Part I

    CIRCULATING HISTORY

    Chapter 1

    RECYCLING NAMES FOR KOREA

    A country’s name naturally reflects its history. For example, there are about a half-dozen official monikers for Germany in different regions and languages, a sign of Germany’s long and fractured existence before it became a unified state in the nineteenth century.

    Korea’s story is somewhat different. With the exception of the Mongolian word, Solongos, which also carries a fascinating history, there are three basic names for Korea around the world: Goryeo (Korea), Joseon and Hanguk. Over its long history, many different expressions have been used, both by neighbors and among Koreans, but these three have become standardized in recent times. Even more interesting is that each of these three terms was revived from an ancient historical period and, in the modern era, underwent further modification in line with political shifts. Such recycling of words for Korea thus shows both the civilization’s longevity and its people’s awareness of their shared past.

    The oldest of the three names is probably Joseon, which appeared in ancient Chinese records in reference to a political entity on the northern part of the peninsula and extending into Manchuria. This connection later became the basis for national myths about Korea’s primordial origins, myths still promoted in both Koreas today.

    Joseon was replaced by the kingdom of Goguryeo, a more verifiable state that ruled over the same territory beginning about 2,000 years ago. Contemporary Chinese sources, using colorful descriptions of customs and rituals, described Goguryeo as one of several groups on the peninsula, which included the three Hans (Jinhan, Mahan and Byeonhan), tribal confederations on the peninsula’s southern half. The term Han appears to have come from a native word for great or big, perhaps also king, but was assigned an ideograph (韓) that referred also to an ancient Chinese kingdom. This added to the confusion, but thereafter the Three Hans, or Samhan, became a conventional reference for the peninsula.

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