Environmental Anarchism: Agriculture and Social Renewal in Modern Korea


DATE
Friday March 31, 2017
TIME
3:30 PM - 5:00 PM

Abstract: Dr. Park will traces the rise of environmental consciousness and movements in South Korea after 1945. In particular, it locates the origins of environmentalism in rural South Korea with agricultural farming communities and cooperatives, such as Hansalim, leading the way. Forms of environmentalism arose in these communities as they responded to a process of “slow violence” against the environment and rural life—a process that started under Japanese colonialism. In laying out their philosophies and practices that were based on their ecology of reclamation, he will discuss how these agricultural-based movements embodied and materialized forms of local autonomy and governance, including anarchism. He will conclude with a discussion on how these forms of locality and their push for environmental sustainability have influenced contemporary drives for creating an alternative economy for social renewal.

Bio:
Dr. Albert L. Park is Associate Professor of History at Claremont McKenna College. As a historian of modern Korea and East Asia, his current research interest is centred on the relationship between culture and political economy and alternative forms of modernity. He is the author of Building a Heaven on Earth: Religion, Activism and Protest in Japanese Occupied Korea and is the co-editor of Encountering Modernity: Christianity and East Asia. His next research project examines the origins of environmental movements in modern Korea and their relationship to locality and local autonomy. Dr. Park is Co-Principal Investigator of EnviroLab Asia—a Henry Luce Foundation-funded initiative at the Claremont Colleges that studies environmental issues in Asia through an interdisciplinary lens. He is the recipient of three Fulbright Fellowships and fellowships from the Korea Foundation and the Center for East Asian Studies at the University of Chicago. A native of Chicago, he received his B.A. with honours from Northwestern University, an M.A. from Columbia University and Ph.D. in History from the University of Chicago.