Belonging in a House Divided Belonging in a House Divided

Belonging in a House Divided

The Violence of the North Korean Resettlement Process

    • $20.99
    • $20.99

Publisher Description

Belonging in a House Divided chronicles the everyday lives of resettled North Korean refugees in South Korea and their experiences of violence, postwar citizenship, and ethnic boundary making. Through extensive ethnographic research, Joowon Park documents the emergence of cultural differences and tensions between Koreans from the North and South, as well as new transnational kinship practices that connect family members across the Korean Demilitarized Zone. As a South Korean citizen raised outside the peninsula and later drafted into the military, Park weaves in autoethnographic accounts of his own experience in the army to provide an empathetic and vivid analysis of the multiple overlapping layers of violence that shape the embodied experiences of belonging. He asks readers to consider why North Korean resettlement in South Korea is a difficult process, despite a shared goal of reunification and the absence of a language barrier. The book is essential reading for anyone interested in anthropology, migration, and the politics of humanitarianism.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2022
November 22
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
224
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of California Press
SELLER
University of California Press
SIZE
10.4
MB
Outsiders Outsiders
2021
Mediating the South Korean Other Mediating the South Korean Other
2022
Korean Memories and Psycho-Historical Fragmentation Korean Memories and Psycho-Historical Fragmentation
2019
Meeting Once More Meeting Once More
2013
The Routledge Handbook of Asian American Studies The Routledge Handbook of Asian American Studies
2016
Who Is the Asianist? Who Is the Asianist?
2022