earticle

논문검색

Contact and Prospect : Imaginative Geography in the Travel Writings of Richard E. Kim in the Late 1980s

원문정보

Nam Hyuk KIM

피인용수 : 0(자료제공 : 네이버학술정보)

초록

영어

This study examines the meaning of the imaginative geography created by contact with communist countries and the prospects for a post-Cold War world. It analyzes newspaper articles, TV documentaries, and the written travelogue about Richard E. Kim’s (Korean name Kim Ŭn’guk 金恩國) travels to China and the Soviet Union in the late 1980s. During this time, neither China nor the Soviet Union had established diplomatic ties with South Korea, and they were not regions in which Koreans could travel freely. As such, the Korean public’s perception of communist countries was somewhat limited. However, as a U.S. citizen, Kim could travel to these countries, and his travels subsequently received significant attention from the South Korean public. Kim gave accounts of his travels in newspapers and books and on TV, but the interpretations of these trips differed according to the medium. Newspapers and documentaries represented the communist countries and the lives of ethnic Koreans according to Cold War Orientalism and emphasized nationalist identity, while Kim’s travelogue departed from both Cold War Orientalism and nationalist identity. Kim’s approach emphasized differences that could not be unified and presented a desirable subjectivity for the upcoming post-Cold War era. In sum, while the documentaries highlighted nationalism, Kim’s travel writing suggested a cosmopolitan subjectivity, two perspectives that differed radically in their prospects for the future.

목차

Abstract
Introduction
Cultural Contact and Cold War Orientalism
Nationalist Identity and Cosmopolitan Subjectivity
Conclusion
References

저자정보

  • Nam Hyuk KIM An assistant professor in the School of Humanities, Art, and Technology at Kookmin University.

참고문헌

자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

    함께 이용한 논문

      ※ 기관로그인 시 무료 이용이 가능합니다.

      • 5,200원

      0개의 논문이 장바구니에 담겼습니다.