Strange bedfellows: Why right‐wing intellectuals in South Korea chose to cooperate with their country's former coloniser
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Published:2023-07-31
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Volume:
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ISSN:1354-5078
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Container-title:Nations and Nationalism
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nations and Nationalism
Author:
Yang Myungji1,
Asahina Yuki2
Affiliation:
1. Department of Sociology University of Hawai'i at Mānoa Honolulu Hawaii USA
2. Graduate School of International and Area Studies Hanguk University of Foreign Studies Seoul Republic of Korea
Abstract
AbstractWhy and when do today's Far‐Right groups cooperate across national boundaries? This paper seeks to provide answers to these questions by examining a deviant rather than representative case: the transnational connections between right‐wing intellectuals in South Korea and Japan. Analysing the recent publication of a highly controversial and provocative book and the transnational politics around it, we emphasise the roles of right‐wing intellectuals and the processes by which divergent political interests converge in changing geopolitical and domestic political contexts. By situating Far Right activities in its broader context of shaping—colonial history, American hegemony and the confrontation with socialist regimes such as China and North Korea—this paper develops a contextual account of the transnational Far Right.
Funder
Hankuk University of Foreign Studies
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Geography, Planning and Development,General Medicine
Reference47 articles.
1. The present conditions and tasks of past settlement in Korea;Ahn B. O.;Critical Review of History,2001
2. Choi J.(2002).Democracy after democratization: The conservative origin of Korean democracy and its crisis[in Korean]. Humanitas.