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The Quest for Statehood - Korean Immigrant Nationalism and U.S. Sovereignty, 1905-1945 (Paperback)
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The Quest for Statehood - Korean Immigrant Nationalism and U.S. Sovereignty, 1905-1945 (Paperback)
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Korean diasporic nationalism in the years between 1905 and 1945
played a foundational role in the emergence of the two separate
Koreas after 1945 that both exist to this day. Koreans in the
United States were a constitutive part of this historical
trajectory. The Quest for Statehood traces the development of
Korean immigrant nationalism within the context of the Korean
independence movement which sought to liberate Korea from Japanese
colonization. Regarding Japanese rule as illegitimate, Koreans in
and out of the Korean peninsula viewed themselves as stateless
peoples who wanted to establish a sovereign state of their own.
Given Japanese repression in Korea, independence activities had to
be carried out from abroad, creating conditions for the emergence
of a diasporic nationalism. Situated at the nexus of geopolitical
relations involving Korea, Japan, and the United States, Koreans in
America came to play a vital role in the state-building project of
Korean diasporic nationalism. The Quest for Statehood explores the
consequences and implications of Korean diasporic identifications
with the homeland in a U.S. setting. Due to the constraints of
diasporic state-building, U.S.-based Koreans increasingly came to
rely on the power of the United States to act as a sovereign state
to pursue the national interests of Koreans throughout the
diaspora. This study contends this strategic reliance on U.S. state
power reflected the development of an ethnic consciousness among
Korean immigrants in America. The efforts of Korean immigrants to
fight for the independence of their homeland necessitated their
participation in civic and political activities in the United
States that established them as an American ethnic group. Korean
nationalism thus paradoxically led to Korean immigrant
incorporation into American political structures whereby ethnicity
served as an organizational resource for making nationalist claims
in the U.S. political arena. Ultimately, homeland nationalism was
central to the assimilation of Korean immigrants as American
ethnics.
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