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The Post-World War II World Order and the Unresolved Cultural Legacies of the Korean War

Review products

ChristineHong, A Violent Peace: Race, U.S. Militarism, and Cultures of Democratization in Cold War Asia and the Pacific (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2020, $30.00). Pp. 320. isbn978 1 5036 1291 4.

Daniel Y.Kim, The Intimacies of Conflict: Cultural Memory and the Korean War (New York: New York University Press, 2020, $29.00). Pp. 336. isbn978 1 4798 0536 5.

Crystal Mun-hyeBaik, Reencounters: On the Korean War and Diasporic Memory Critique (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2019, $34.95). Pp. 252. isbn978 1 4399 1899 9.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2021

JEEHYUN LIM*
Affiliation:
Department of English, University at Buffalo, State University of New York. Email: jeehyunl@buffalo.edu.

Extract

The Korean War has never had a notable place in American culture. A crop of recent scholarship by Korean American scholars queries the reasons for this absence of the Korean War's cultural presence, going against the critical commonplace that the war was insignificant and calling for a reckoning with the cultural legacies of the Korean War. Christine Hong's A Violent Peace, Daniel Y. Kim's The Intimacies of Conflict, and Crystal Mun-hye Baik's Reencounters illustrate new directions and new possibilities in the scholarship on the Korean War, which is dominated by historical studies often guided by traditional approaches to international relations or foreign policy. Informed by approaches in ethnic studies – and particularly the field's interest in racialization as transnational and cross-border phenomenon – these books show that it is not only productive to revisit the “forgotten war” but imperative to do so. Through a wide range of cultural texts and with an exclusive focus on the perspectives and experiences of people of color, these studies probe the underexamined role the conflict has played in shaping liberal ideas on freedom and justice, attend to the contradictions of the cultural forms that clothed these ideas in post-World War II US culture, and point to new cultural interventions that challenge and dislodge long-standing Cold War orthodoxies.

Type
Review Essay
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press in association with the British Association for American Studies

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