
History of the Republic of Korea 3
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Book Introduction
This history textbook, which adds Professor Han Hong-gu's witty remarks and perspective as a historian to our interesting history that is already presented as it is, is a valuable source of information.
Following Volumes 1 and 2, Volume 3 reveals the dark side of modern Korean political history, which arose from pro-Japanese, pro-American, and abnormal relations between the North and South.
In Part 1, under the subtitle “Live Uprightly,” we present a correct assessment of Park Chung-hee, the controversial remarks of Professor Han Seung-jo, and criticism of the New Right movement.
Part 2 examines the issue of clearing up the past of pro-Japanese and intelligence agencies, and Part 3 examines various aspects of Korean political history, focusing on the '2004 impeachment of the president.'
Part 4 looks at various inhumane spy cases fabricated by those in power, starting with the 'Chinese Communist Party's Minseongdan Incident', and Part 5 looks at the military culture and military service issues in Korean society, which have drawn more attention from the world due to the recent shooting incident, and North Korea.
Following Volumes 1 and 2, Volume 3 reveals the dark side of modern Korean political history, which arose from pro-Japanese, pro-American, and abnormal relations between the North and South.
In Part 1, under the subtitle “Live Uprightly,” we present a correct assessment of Park Chung-hee, the controversial remarks of Professor Han Seung-jo, and criticism of the New Right movement.
Part 2 examines the issue of clearing up the past of pro-Japanese and intelligence agencies, and Part 3 examines various aspects of Korean political history, focusing on the '2004 impeachment of the president.'
Part 4 looks at various inhumane spy cases fabricated by those in power, starting with the 'Chinese Communist Party's Minseongdan Incident', and Part 5 looks at the military culture and military service issues in Korean society, which have drawn more attention from the world due to the recent shooting incident, and North Korea.
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index
Preface/ 'History': A Drama of Hope and Reversal
Part 1: Live Uprightly: A History of Betrayal, a History of Degeneration
Park Chung-hee in 2005, Park Chung-hee's 2005 / Let's bury him in peace.
Be thankful in all things, Han Seung-jo, a military boy / Korean right-wingers are chanting "Eomme Gisal-eo" over the Dokdo issue...
The Sorrow of a 'Nameplate' That Cut Through the Air / Why Do Representatives Lee Jae-oh and Kim Moon-soo Keep Going Overboard?
The Tragedy and Comedy of South Korea's Injectionist Party / Don't Just Grab Anyone and Use "Injection" to Hunt for Witches
The New Right must have "character" / "Upgraded Liberal 486" is a childish, reactionary act that rivals even the conservatives.
Part 2: The Last Emergency Exit to the Past
Are you afraid of the 60-year-old cleanup? / True clearing of the past is the process of establishing new relationships.
Stripping Away the "State Above the State" / Why It's Important to Resolve the Intelligence Agency's Past
Yasukuni, a military facility that forcibly conscripts even the souls of the dead / Will the 23 Koreans executed as war criminals find peace in the arms of the emperor?
Those who kill the victim twice with joint sexual assault and nonsense by Korean and Japanese conservatives
"We miss our national textbooks" / When will we ever be able to teach a conscious history?
Part 3: Conservatism and Progressivism in the "Impeachment Era"
I can hear the sound of the magic flute / March 2004, the polar opposite of the 'impeachment of Syngman Rhee in the 1920s'
Pull Out Your Belly Button and Throw It at Them / The Evolution of Political Satire: Lively Retaliation and Cheerful Punishment
Remember the 'robbed wallet' / The Democratic Labor Party's achievements are incredibly humble.
Your Honor, Your Honor, Your Tamed Judge...
/ Why the judiciary, once the cleanest and smartest, was so terribly ruined
'Customary criminal law' killed more / 'Personal weapons' National Defense Security Act, to judges it was 'customary' law
Part 4: I Wanted to Catch It So Crazy: Memories of a Spy
The spy I wanted to catch but couldn't / They were so 'trivial' compared to my expectations (Memories of a Spy 1)
Spies Don't Come, They're Just Made / The Story of the Rapid Increase in Zainichi Korean Spy Cases (Memories of a Spy 2)
The Choi Jong-gil Case: A Bloody Taste for the Yushin Regime / The Seeds of the Gwangju Massacre of 1980 Sowed (Memoirs of a Spy, Part 3)
Even 'spies' protected democracy / Watching the spy hunt that bites the suspicious death investigation
Even if you spilled rice, you died / The Minsengdan incident: The Chinese Communist Party's hunt for Korean spies
Part 5: Beyond Conflict to a History of Reconciliation: The Military and the North as Seen from the South of a Divided Homeland
Kim Il-sung, a 20th-century nationalist / He may not have been the sun of the nation, but we must acknowledge that he was the leader of his brothers.
A Great Star in North Korean Studies Falls / What Professor Kim Nam-sik Left Behind
Are the Korean soldiers like dogs? / How long will they keep demanding, "If you tell me to cut it, cut it"?
Does the South Korean military want human wave tactics? / Ministry of National Defense and Military Manpower Administration should learn from Taiwan.
I am ashamed of Jehovah's Witnesses / They refused to join the army more uncompromisingly than the revolutionaries...
Part 1: Live Uprightly: A History of Betrayal, a History of Degeneration
Park Chung-hee in 2005, Park Chung-hee's 2005 / Let's bury him in peace.
Be thankful in all things, Han Seung-jo, a military boy / Korean right-wingers are chanting "Eomme Gisal-eo" over the Dokdo issue...
The Sorrow of a 'Nameplate' That Cut Through the Air / Why Do Representatives Lee Jae-oh and Kim Moon-soo Keep Going Overboard?
The Tragedy and Comedy of South Korea's Injectionist Party / Don't Just Grab Anyone and Use "Injection" to Hunt for Witches
The New Right must have "character" / "Upgraded Liberal 486" is a childish, reactionary act that rivals even the conservatives.
Part 2: The Last Emergency Exit to the Past
Are you afraid of the 60-year-old cleanup? / True clearing of the past is the process of establishing new relationships.
Stripping Away the "State Above the State" / Why It's Important to Resolve the Intelligence Agency's Past
Yasukuni, a military facility that forcibly conscripts even the souls of the dead / Will the 23 Koreans executed as war criminals find peace in the arms of the emperor?
Those who kill the victim twice with joint sexual assault and nonsense by Korean and Japanese conservatives
"We miss our national textbooks" / When will we ever be able to teach a conscious history?
Part 3: Conservatism and Progressivism in the "Impeachment Era"
I can hear the sound of the magic flute / March 2004, the polar opposite of the 'impeachment of Syngman Rhee in the 1920s'
Pull Out Your Belly Button and Throw It at Them / The Evolution of Political Satire: Lively Retaliation and Cheerful Punishment
Remember the 'robbed wallet' / The Democratic Labor Party's achievements are incredibly humble.
Your Honor, Your Honor, Your Tamed Judge...
/ Why the judiciary, once the cleanest and smartest, was so terribly ruined
'Customary criminal law' killed more / 'Personal weapons' National Defense Security Act, to judges it was 'customary' law
Part 4: I Wanted to Catch It So Crazy: Memories of a Spy
The spy I wanted to catch but couldn't / They were so 'trivial' compared to my expectations (Memories of a Spy 1)
Spies Don't Come, They're Just Made / The Story of the Rapid Increase in Zainichi Korean Spy Cases (Memories of a Spy 2)
The Choi Jong-gil Case: A Bloody Taste for the Yushin Regime / The Seeds of the Gwangju Massacre of 1980 Sowed (Memoirs of a Spy, Part 3)
Even 'spies' protected democracy / Watching the spy hunt that bites the suspicious death investigation
Even if you spilled rice, you died / The Minsengdan incident: The Chinese Communist Party's hunt for Korean spies
Part 5: Beyond Conflict to a History of Reconciliation: The Military and the North as Seen from the South of a Divided Homeland
Kim Il-sung, a 20th-century nationalist / He may not have been the sun of the nation, but we must acknowledge that he was the leader of his brothers.
A Great Star in North Korean Studies Falls / What Professor Kim Nam-sik Left Behind
Are the Korean soldiers like dogs? / How long will they keep demanding, "If you tell me to cut it, cut it"?
Does the South Korean military want human wave tactics? / Ministry of National Defense and Military Manpower Administration should learn from Taiwan.
I am ashamed of Jehovah's Witnesses / They refused to join the army more uncompromisingly than the revolutionaries...
Into the book
And who would have thought that 25 years after his death, we would see his daughter on television every day? Who would have thought that these once-proud democracy fighters would be so brutally destroyed? They say, "There's nothing new under the sun," but truly, our history is renewed every day.
--- From the 'Preface'
One of the major problems with intelligence agencies under the military dictatorship was that they were so focused on domestic politics that they were ignorant of information from overseas or North Korea.
During the Park Chung-hee era, the Central Intelligence Agency poured manpower, equipment, and budget into monitoring every move of individual politicians that Park Chung-hee cared about.
However, most of this information was nothing more than gossip, such as stories about who met whom, ate with whom, and drank with whom.
Gregg, who served as the head of the CIA's Korean branch in the late 1960s, complained that the Korean CIA was not interested in foreign or North Korean intelligence and was only focused on domestic interests.
One of the major problems with intelligence agencies under the military dictatorship was that they were so focused on domestic politics that they were ignorant of information from overseas or North Korea.
The Central Intelligence Agency during the Park Chung-hee era poured manpower, equipment, and budget into monitoring every move of individual politicians that Park Chung-hee cared about.
However, most of this information was nothing more than gossip, such as stories about who met whom, ate with whom, and drank with whom.
Gregg, who served as the head of the CIA's Korean branch in the late 1960s, complained that the Korean CIA was not interested in foreign or North Korean intelligence and was only focused on domestic interests.
During the Park Chung-hee era, the Central Intelligence Agency poured manpower, equipment, and budget into monitoring every move of individual politicians that Park Chung-hee cared about.
However, most of this information was nothing more than gossip, such as stories about who met whom, ate with whom, and drank with whom.
Gregg, who served as the head of the CIA's Korean branch in the late 1960s, complained that the Korean CIA was not interested in foreign or North Korean intelligence and was only focused on domestic interests.
One of the major problems with intelligence agencies under the military dictatorship was that they were so focused on domestic politics that they were ignorant of information from overseas or North Korea.
The Central Intelligence Agency during the Park Chung-hee era poured manpower, equipment, and budget into monitoring every move of individual politicians that Park Chung-hee cared about.
However, most of this information was nothing more than gossip, such as stories about who met whom, ate with whom, and drank with whom.
Gregg, who served as the head of the CIA's Korean branch in the late 1960s, complained that the Korean CIA was not interested in foreign or North Korean intelligence and was only focused on domestic interests.
--- p.95 From 'Information about the dark foreign countries and North Korea'
Publisher's Review
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GOODS SPECIFICS
- Date of issue: July 5, 2005
- Page count, weight, size: 313 pages | 480g | 153*224*30mm
- ISBN13: 9788984311534
- ISBN10: 8984311537
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