earticle

논문검색

GENERAL ARTICLES

The Prosody of Working and the Narrative of Martyrdom : Daily Life and Death in North Korean Literature during the Great Famine and the Early Military-First Age (1994–2002)

원문정보

KIM SUNGHEE

피인용수 : 0(자료제공 : 네이버학술정보)

초록

영어

The government of Kim Jong Il (Kim Chŏngil) modified the meaning and purpose of during the North Korean famine and the early Military-First period (1994–2002). During the economic recession after the Soviet bloc collapsed, the North Korean government was incapable of providing material rewards to workers. Thus, the state attempted to transform labor into a spiritual rather than material practice. Despite the shortage of material resources and energy, the regime had to make the workers stay in their workplaces to maintain social stability. At that time, North Korean fiction often described people who worked for spiritual enlightenment rather than for material gain. In the novel and historical prose of this period, protagonists work not for their livelihoods, but for their honorable death; they voluntarily martyred themselves for their country, party, and leader Kim Jong Il. This study explores Song Sangwŏn’s Ch’onggŏm ŭl tŭlgo (Taking up bayonets) (2002) to examine how North Koreans worked, lived, and died at the turn of the twentieth century.

목차

Abstract
The Military-First Revolution
Requiem for the Living and the Sound of Conscience
Labor and Communal Life
Labor as a Meditation
Dying to Self and the Theater of Cruelty
“The Reservoir of Death”
References

저자정보

  • KIM SUNGHEE A research professor at the University of North Korean Studies, Seoul.

참고문헌

자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

    함께 이용한 논문

      ※ 기관로그인 시 무료 이용이 가능합니다.

      • 5,500원

      0개의 논문이 장바구니에 담겼습니다.