The Making of Minjung: Democracy and the Politics of Representation in South Korea

The Making of Minjung: Democracy and the Politics of Representation in South Korea

by Namhee Lee
The Making of Minjung: Democracy and the Politics of Representation in South Korea

The Making of Minjung: Democracy and the Politics of Representation in South Korea

by Namhee Lee

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Overview

In this sweeping intellectual and cultural history of the minjung ("common people's") movement in South Korea, Namhee Lee shows how the movement arose in the 1970s and 1980s in response to the repressive authoritarian regime and grew out of a widespread sense that the nation's "failed history" left Korean identity profoundly incomplete. The Making of Minjung captures the movement in its many dimensions, presenting its intellectual trajectory as a discourse and its impact as a political movement, as well as raising questions about how intellectuals represented the minjung. Lee's portrait is based on a wide range of sources: underground pamphlets, diaries, court documents, contemporary newspaper reports, and interviews with participants.

Thousands of students and intellectuals left universities during this period and became factory workers, forging an intellectual-labor alliance perhaps unique in world history. At the same time, minjung cultural activists reinvigorated traditional folk theater, created a new "minjung literature," and influenced religious practices and academic disciplines. In its transformative scope, the minjung phenomenon is comparable to better-known contemporaneous movements in South Africa, Latin America, and Eastern Europe.

Understanding the minjung movement is essential to understanding South Korea's recent resistance to U.S. influence. Along with its well-known economic transformation, South Korea has also had a profound social and political transformation. The minjung movement drove this transformation, and this book tells its story comprehensively and critically.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801461699
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 06/15/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
File size: 8 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Namhee Lee is Associate Professor of Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments     ix
Notes on Romanization and Translation     xiii
Introduction: Minjung, History, and Historical Subjectivity     1
The Crisis of Historical Subjectivity     21
The Construction of Minjung     23
Anticommunism and North Korea     70
Anti-Americanism and Chuch'e Sasang     109
Building a Counterpublic Sphere     145
The Undongkwon as a Counterpublic Sphere     147
Between Indeterminacy and Radical Critique: Madangguk, Ritual, and Protest     187
The Alliance between Labor and Intellectuals     213
The Politics of Representation     241
"To Be Reborn as Revolutionary Workers": Gramscian Fusion and Leninist Vanguardism     243
The Subject as the Subjected: Intellectuals and Workers in Labor Literature     269
Conclusion: The Minjung Movement as History     294
Bibliography     305
Index     339

What People are Saying About This

Donald N. Clark

In The Making of Minjung, which is notable for its evenhandedness, Namhee Lee has given us what will become the standard work on the confluence of political, economic, and social forces underlying South Korea's transition from military dictatorship to a flourishing democracy.

Nancy Abelmann

A tour de force! The Making of Minjung puts the South Korean struggles for democracy and social justice on the world historical stage. An answer to the postcolonial predicament, a movement, and a transformative public sphere, minjung emerges as a remarkable historical constellation. Namhee Lee's is that sort of history of the present that takes us into the future.

Joseph Wong

The Making of Minjung is a pathbreaking book on an important movement in Korea's contemporary social and political history. It is extremely well researched, full of new insights, and true to the lived realities of student activists and their allies in Korea's democratic development.

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