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This edited volume brings together a set of essays exploring the
global dimensions of Korea's recent history and politics by a group
of the most talented young scholars. Essays in the volume seek to
answer two interrelated questions: How have international
developments impacted Korea? And how has Korea in turn influenced
world events and trends? The volume demonstrates that the most
important issues in Korea's post World War II history-division,
war, economic development, and inter-Korean rivalry-cannot be
understood without reference to the country's global interactions.
Essays in the volume cover a range of topics including: U.S.-South
Korean relations, North Korean foreign policy, immigration, and
democratization. The essays included in the volume push the
boundaries of several different subfields. Historical essays break
new ground by introducing new archival materials and revealing
important details about the past diplomacy of the two Korea's.
Others consider aspects of American influence on Korea that have
previously been ignored such as the U.S. impact on urban
development and food consumption. Essays on contemporary Korean
politics and society make sense of most recent developments in
North and South Korea while presenting intriguing new interpretive
frameworks. By bringing new voices in Korean Studies to the
forefront, this volume changes how we understand and
reconceptualize Korea's role in the world.
This edited volume brings together a set of essays exploring the
global dimensions of Korea's recent history and politics by a group
of the most talented young scholars. Essays in the volume seek to
answer two interrelated questions: How have international
developments impacted Korea? And how has Korea in turn influenced
world events and trends? The volume demonstrates that the most
important issues in Korea's post World War II history-division,
war, economic development, and inter-Korean rivalry-cannot be
understood without reference to the country's global interactions.
Essays in the volume cover a range of topics including: U.S.-South
Korean relations, North Korean foreign policy, immigration, and
democratization. The essays included in the volume push the
boundaries of several different subfields. Historical essays break
new ground by introducing new archival materials and revealing
important details about the past diplomacy of the two Korea's.
Others consider aspects of American influence on Korea that have
previously been ignored such as the U.S. impact on urban
development and food consumption. Essays on contemporary Korean
politics and society make sense of most recent developments in
North and South Korea while presenting intriguing new interpretive
frameworks. By bringing new voices in Korean Studies to the
forefront, this volume changes how we understand and
reconceptualize Korea's role in the world.
Since the 1990s, the Chinese-North Korean border region has
undergone a gradual transformation into a site of intensified
cooperation, competition, and intrigue. These changes have prompted
a significant volume of critical scholarship and media commentary
across multiple languages and disciplines. Drawing on existing
studies and new data, Decoding the Sino-North Korean Borderlands
brings much of this literature into concert by pulling together a
wide range of insight on the region's economics, security, social
cohesion, and information flows. Drawing from multilingual sources
and transnational scholarship, this volume is enhanced by the
extensive fieldwork undertaken by the editors and contributors in
their quests to decode the borderland. In doing so, the volume
emphasizes the link between theory, methodology, and practice in
the field of Area Studies and social science more broadly.
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