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UID:20160525T1622Z-1464193375.3915-EO-19964-2671@142.103.0.67
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTAMP:20260418T131417Z
CREATED:20160524T174458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181017T233008Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20150313T153000
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SUMMARY: Making Sense of a Worker Self-Immolation in 1970s South Korea
DESCRIPTION: The death of young garment worker Chun Tae-il by self-immolati
 on on November 13\, 1970 has been widely acknowledged among both activists 
 and scholars as the watershed event for the South Korean democracy movement
  and for the labor movement in particular.  As dissident activists searched
  for a viable counter-narrative against the powerful developmentalist disco
 urse of the […]
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <p>The death of young garment worker Chun Tae
 -il by self-immolation on November 13\, 1970 has been widely acknowledged a
 mong both activists and scholars as the watershed event for the South Korea
 n democracy movement and for the labor movement in particular.  As dissiden
 t activists searched for a viable counter-narrative against the powerful de
 velopmentalist discourse of the Park Chung Hee and Chun Doo Hwan regimes ov
 er the 1970s and 1980s\, a particular narrative of the meaning of Chun Tae-
 il’s life and death emerged and became hegemonic in the anti-authoritarian 
 democracy movement.  Cho Young-rae’s biography of Chun\, written over the 1
 970s and published in 1983\, played a key role in fixing and disseminating 
 Chun’s thought and legacy.  This paper examines how Cho read texts by Chun\
 , and provides an alternative reading of Chun Tae-il’s story\, which sheds 
 light on the changes the 1970s brought to South Korean politics.<b><br /></
 b></p><p><b>Biography:</b></p><p>Hwasook Nam is a James B. Palais Endowed A
 ssociate Professor in Korea Studies\, holding a joint appointment in the Ja
 ckson School of International Studies and the Department of History at the 
 University of Washington.  She received her B.A. and M.A. degrees in Korean
  history from Seoul National University and her Ph.D. from the University o
 f Washington.  Her first book\, Building Ships\, Building a Nation: Korea’s
  Democratic Unionism under Park Chung Hee (2009\, University of Washington 
 Press) won the James B. Palais Book Prize in 2011\, and has been translated
  into Korean (2014\, Humanitas).  She is currently working on the history o
 f martyrdom in the South Korean labor movement and on gender politics of th
 e post-1945 decades.</p><p>View PDF poster <a href="https://sppga.cms.arts.
 ubc.ca/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2016/05/Hwasook-Nam-Announcement.pdf">her
 e</a>.</p><p>RSVP <a href="http://goo.gl/forms/zzLbBbJfLV">here</a>.</p><p>
 <strong>Sponsor:</strong> Centre for Korean Research<br /><strong>By:</stro
 ng> Professor Hwasook Nam\, University of Washington<br /><strong>Type:</st
 rong> Seminar</p>
LOCATION:Room 120\, C.K. Choi Building
GEO:49.267258;-123.257967
URL;VALUE=URI:https://sppga.ubc.ca/events/event/making-sense-of-a-worker-se
 lf-immolation-in-1970s-south-korea/
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DTSTART:20150308T100000
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