South Korea Our Story
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Author | : Michael Breen |
Publisher | : Thomas Dunne Books |
Total Pages | : 481 |
Release | : 2017-04-04 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 1250065054 |
"Just a few decades ago, the Koreans were an impoverished, agricultural people. In one generation they moved from the fields to Silicon Valley. The nature and values of the Korean people provide the background for a more detailed examination of the complex history of the country, in particular its division and its emergence as an economic superpower. Who are these people? And where does their future lie?"--
Author | : Daniel Nardini |
Publisher | : Xlibris Corporation |
Total Pages | : 72 |
Release | : 2013-02-08 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 1479792276 |
The book South Korea: Our Story is a book about my personal discovery of the Republic of Korea (South Korea) and its ancient cultural and historical heritage. It is about a land that is both old and new as South Korea and the Korean people reinvent their nation for the twenty-first century. It is a love story where I meet my future wife, Ryoo Hwa Soon. She was one of my students, and because of her, I became more intertwined with the heart and soul of a country. But this story is more than just a tale of self-discovery and finding love. It is about a nation that is in the grip of a power struggle between the forces of freedom and democracy and the forces of Communism. These forces overshadow what is happening not only in South Korea but in Korean communities within the United States itself. This fight is as old as the formation of North and South Korea and still remains the power struggle for the soul of a nation and its people.
Author | : Theodore Jun Yoo |
Publisher | : Univ of California Press |
Total Pages | : 353 |
Release | : 2022-09-27 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0520391683 |
"Korea is one of the last divided countries in the world. Twins born of the Cold War, one is vilified as an isolated, impoverished, time-warped state with an abysmal human rights record and a reclusive leader who perennially threatens global security with his clandestine nuclear weapons program. The other is lauded as a thriving democratic and capitalist state with the thirteenth largest economy in the world and a model that developing countries should emulate. In The Koreas, Theodore Jun Yoo provides a ... gateway to understanding the divergent developments of contemporary North and South Korea. In contrast to standard histories, Yoo examines the unique qualities of the Korean diaspora experience, which has challenged the master narratives of national culture, homogeneity, belongingness, and identity"--
Author | : Nancy Louise Frey |
Publisher | : Univ of California Press |
Total Pages | : 340 |
Release | : 1998-12-30 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 9780520217515 |
Unlike the religiously-oriented pilgrims who visit Marian shrines such as Lourdes, the modern Road of St. James attracts an ecumenical mix of largely wel.
Author | : Alice Hoffenberg Amsden |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press, USA |
Total Pages | : 400 |
Release | : 1989 |
Genre | : Business & Economics |
ISBN | : 9780195076035 |
South Korea has been quietly growing into a major economic force, even challenging Japan in some industries. This growth may be seen as an example of "late industrialization" and this book discusses this point.
Author | : Vivian L. Beeler |
Publisher | : Xlibris Corporation |
Total Pages | : 678 |
Release | : 2012-05-07 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1469125900 |
Our Story 90 years, Looking Back... The world has changed so much in 90 years that I wanted to write about how they affected our lives. To let you know that we were real people that had the same emotions and feelings that you have. Ive included a little genealogy, a little history and how the things you read about in your history books affected us. Also, how the world has changed socially and morally and not always for the best. Of course this is your 90 year old Great Grandmas story and ideas.
Author | : Abigayle Locke |
Publisher | : Abigayle Locke |
Total Pages | : 73 |
Release | : 2020-04-25 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : |
Our Stories is a collection of articles about people around the Dayton area and how a community is connected. These articles are written by journalists at Wright State University.
Author | : George Ogle |
Publisher | : Xlibris Corporation |
Total Pages | : 606 |
Release | : 2012-02-21 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1469158930 |
Because he prayed in public for eight men who were tortured, forced to make false confessions and were sentenced to death by South Korea’s military dictatorship, in 1974 George Ogle was deported from the country where he had worked as a missionary for 20 years. Two months later when Dorothy and the four Ogle children left Korea, friends and colleagues commissioned them to “Go tell our story.” After the South Korean people ended the military dictatorship in 1987, the story changed from the struggle for democracy and human rights to a story of the Korean movement for peace and reunifi cation of their divided nation. Compelling and comprehensive, Our Lives in Korea and Korea in Our Lives is not only the Ogles’ personal memoirs of living in South Korea from 1954-1974 and later visiting both the North and South, it is an effort to tell the story of the Korean people as the authors experienced it directly, and as it has come to them by closely following the evolving history through almost 60 years. The book highlights the hope and promise of President Kim DaeJung’s “Sunshine Policy” of constructive engagement with North Korea and is written to give readers around the world a vision for ending the Korean War to bring peace, prosperity and reconciliation to all of the Korean people.
Author | : William Ambrose Spicer |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 388 |
Release | : 1921 |
Genre | : Missions |
ISBN | : |
I. Preliminary - The Work of Missions. II. Missionary Witness in Early Old Testament Times. III. The People of Israel as Witnesses to the Nations. IV. In New Testament Times. V. Through the Centuries to the Reformation. VI. Preparation for the Era of Missions. VII. Beginning of the Era of Modern Missions. VIII. Preparation of the Way for the Advent Movement and Message. IX. Beginning of Seventh-Day Adventist Missions. X. Northern Europe. XI. In Great Britain and Ireland. XII. In Germany. XIII. Other Countries of North Central and Southeastern Europe. XIV. In Southern Europe. XV. Russia and Siberia. XVI. The Levant. XVII. Africa. XVIII. Central America and the Caribbean. XIX. South America. XX. Australia and New Zealand. XXI. The Islands of the South Pacific. XXII. India, Ceylon and Burma. XXIII. The East Indies - Malaysia. XXIV. The Philippine Islands. XXV. China. XXVI. In the Japanese Empire. XXVII. Detached Island Fields and Unentered Lands
Author | : Yuri W. Doolan |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 265 |
Release | : 2024 |
Genre | : Family & Relationships |
ISBN | : 0197534384 |
During the 1950s, thousands of mixed race children were born to US servicemen and local Korean women in US-occupied South Korea. Assumed to be the progeny of camptown women--or military prostitutes--their presence created a major problem for the image of US democracy in the world at a time when the nation was vying for Cold War allegiances abroad. As mixed race children became a discernible population around US military encampments in South Korea, communists seized upon the image of those left behind by their GI fathers as evidence of US imperialism, irresponsibility, and immorality in the Third World. Aware of this and keen to redeem the image of America's intervention in Asia, US citizens spearheading the postwar recovery of recently war-torn South Korea embarked upon a campaign in US Congress to bring as many of these children home. By the early 1960s, American philanthropists, missionaries, and voluntary agencies had succeeded in constructing the figure of the abandoned and mistreated Amerasian orphan to lobby US Congress for the quick passage of intercountry adoption laws. They also gained the sympathies of American families, eager to welcome these racially different children into the intimate confines of their homes. Although the adoptions of Korean "Amerasian" children helped to promote an image of humanitarian rescue and Cold War racial liberalism in 1950s and 1960s America, there was one other problem: many of these children were not actually orphans, but had been living with their Korean mothers in the camptown communities surrounding US military bases prior to adoption. Their placements into American families relied upon dehumanizing constructions of these women as hardened prostitutes who did not even love their own children, South Korea as a backwards, racist society bent-up on Confucian tradition and pure bloodlines, and the United States as a welcoming home in an era of intense racial segregation. The First Amerasians tells the powerful, oftentimes heartbreaking story of how Americans created and used the concept of the Amerasian to remove thousands of mixed race children from their Korean mothers to adoptive US homes during the 1950s and 1960s. In doing so, Yuri W. Doolan reveals how the Amerasian is not simply a mixed race person fathered by a US serviceman in Asia nor a racial term used to describe individuals with one American and one Asian parent like its popular definition suggests. Rather, the Amerasian is a Cold War construct whose rescue has been utilized to repudiate accusations of US imperialism and achieve sentimental victories in the aftermath of wars not quite won by the military. From such constructions, Americans lobbied Congress twice: first, in the 1950s to establish international adoption laws that would lead to the placement of hundreds of thousands of Korean children in the United States, then, later in the 1980s, when the plight of mixed race Koreans would be invoked again to argue for Amerasian immigration laws culminating in the migrations of tens of thousands of mixed race Vietnamese and their relatives. Beyond Cold War historiography, this book also shows how in using the figure of the mistreated and abandoned Amerasian in need of rescue, Americans caused harm to actual people--mixed race Koreans and their mothers specifically--as children were placed into adoptive homes during an era where few regulations or safeguards existed to protect them from abuse, negligence, or racial hostilities in the US and many Korean mothers were coerced, both physically and monetarily, to relinquish their children to American authorities.