Ten reflections after writing a modern history of the two Koreas
Lecturer: Adrian Buzo
The lecturer writes: ‘History, sir, will tell lies as usual.’ is a favourite quote from George Bernard Shaw’s The Devil’s Disciple, and the two Koreas are no exceptions to this dictum, though nor are they especially conspicuous offenders. Korean historians from all parts of the political spectrum have merely joined in the common rush to enlist the historical narrative as allies in their various struggles, and over the years they have been joined by quite a few foreigners. The result is a secondary literature that is frequently opaque, confusing and partisan.
Over the past fifteen years or so I have had the privilege of writing successive editions of a book titled The Making of Modern Korea for the UK publisher Routledge. The third edition was published late last year, and affords an opportunity to reflect on some of the things I have learnt – and failed to learn – over the course of reading a wide variety of source material on modern Korean history. I focus on the following topics: the
9 views
436
124
4 days ago 00:05:32 1
Queen - Bohemian Rhapsody (Live at Rock Montreal, 1981) [HD]
4 weeks ago 00:30:34 10
JHS Colour Box: A 1073 You Can Take Anywhere
1 month ago 00:08:53 1
Layoffs at John Deere blow up investment thesis on food shortages; US farmland to see liquidation
1 month ago 00:08:39 1
⚛️Prayer for the Flourishing of the Dharma (བསྟན་རྒྱས་སྨོན་ལམ།) Buddha, Dharma and Saṅgha
1 month ago 00:00:00 1
Powerful Chaplet of the Evangelical Virtues of Mary, Freedom & Healing through the Immaculate Heart
1 month ago 00:04:25 1
Nightrage - Deadliest Sin (Official Lyric Video)
1 month ago 01:00:55 1
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg farewell speech and conversation, 19 SEP 2024
1 month ago 00:02:05 1
BRAINWAVES’ GOUGE / KASANE TETO
1 month ago 00:07:07 2
PATRIARKH - WIERSZALIN III (feat. A. Strug & M. Maleńczuk) (Official Video) | Napalm Records