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Minor salvage : the Korean War and Korean American life writings / Stephen Hong Sohn.

Van Pelt Library DS921.6 .S584 2022
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Sohn, Stephen Hong, Author.
Contributor:
Rosengarten Family Fund.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Korean War, 1950-1953--Personal narratives.
Korean War, 1950-1953.
War and literature--United States--20th century.
War and literature.
Biography as a literary form.
Korean Americans--Biography.
Korean Americans.
Korean American literature--20th century--History and criticism.
Korean American literature.
biography (general genre).
United States.
Genre:
Personal narratives
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Biographies
Biographies.
Personal narratives.
Literary criticism.
Physical Description:
xii, 295 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Other Title:
Korean War and Korean American life writings
Place of Publication:
Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, 2022.
Summary:
The Korean War, often invoked in American culture as "the forgotten war," remains ongoing. Though active fighting only occurred between 1950 and 1953, the signing of an armistice resulted in an infamous stalemate and the construction of the Korean Peninsula's Demilitarized Zone. Minor Salvage reads early Korean American life writings in order to explore the admittedly partial ways in which those made precarious by war seek to rebuild their lives. The titular phrase "minor salvage," draws on different valences of the word salvage which, while initially associated with naval recovery efforts, can also be used to describe the rescue of waste material. Spurred by the stories told and retold to him by his parents Soon Ho and Yunpyo, Sohn enacts minor salvage by reading overlooked early Korean American life writings penned by Induk Pahk, Taiwon Koh, Joseph Anthony, and Kim Yong-ik alongside a later generation of life writings authored by Sunny Che and K. Connie Kang. In the context of the Korean War, Sohn argues, life writings take on a crucial political orientation precisely because of the fragility attached to refugees, civilians, children, women, and divided family members. To depict the possibility of life is to acknowledge simultaneously the threat of death, violence, and brutality, and in this regard, such life writings are part of a longer genealogy in which marginalized communities find representational power through the creative process.
Contents:
Unfinishing War
Proximate Memory Assemblage : Refugee Shapeshifting and the Many Metamorphoses of My Parents
Extending the Gift of American Refuge : Beyond Familial Separation in the Life Writings of Induk Pahk and Taiwon Koh
Authorial Revisions : Fantasies of the Archive and the Many Faces of Joseph Anthony
Critical Refutopias : Adaptation and Representational Resurrections in Kim Yong-ik's Fictional Life Writings
Retrospective Transformations : Recounting Refugee Flight in the Memoirs of K. Connie Kang and Sunny Che
On (Un)ending.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 247-279) and index.
Local Notes:
Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Rosengarten Family Fund.
ISBN:
0472055208
9780472055203
0472075209
9780472075201
OCLC:
1288138559

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