1910 – 1930 early Japanese rule
- Annexation treaty 1910/8/22
- Japanese Colonization of Korea (1910–1945)
- Military Rule (1910–1919)
- Suppression of Righteous armies, speech, press
- No Korean language newspapers
- Unless under control by Japanese government
- March 1st Movement (1919)
- Protest against suppressive govt
- Desire for liberation
- Cultural Rule (1920–1930)
- Overt to indirect suppression
- Pressure valve to avoid explosion of dissatisfaction
- Cultural expressions and activities moderated
- Opening of Korean language newspapers (1920)
- Education increased
- Self-strengthening movement
- Direct action patriotic movements move to Manchuria
1931–1945 wartime mobilization
- Invasion of Manchuria (1931)
- Migration to Manchuria
- Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945) ⊂ World War II - September 1939 – September 1945
- Marco Polo Bridge Incident (1937/7/7)
- Great East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere (1940)
- Naisen Ittai Policy (1940)
- Shinto shrine proliferation
- Japanese only language policy
- Soshi Kaimei (Japanese family names)
- Closing of Korean language newspapers (1940)
- Increase in wartime propaganda
- Conscription of factory workers
- Comfort women
- Suppression and desire for control
- Wipes out prior collective memory
divided Korea
- August 1945
- By US and USSR to deal with liberation post Japanese surrender
- Assumed Japan wouldn’t surrender easily
- Not as necessary but kept
- Two areas became occupied
- Entangled in ideologies of Cold War
- Attempts to create own government repressed by US until 1948, beginning of the Republic of Korea
- Protests against
- Permanent division
- Trusteeship by other nations
- → radicalization, contention, violence
- Syngman Rhee freedom fighter, fled to US, in charge
- North Korea
- Clear action to kick Japanese out
- Kicked Christians out
- South Korea
- Favoritism toward those with ties to former colonial empire of Japan
- Poverty
- Mass migration back into Korea from Manchuria, Japan
- Difficult to create law and order
- → more and more brutal and suppressive
- Hard to label dissidence, out-group
1950–1953 Korean War
- 6.25 War
- Both civil and international
- Unconventional
- UN declared war
- North Korea: Chinese and Soviet troops
- Increased fear in soldiers due to not being able to identify clear enemy
- Pushing back and forth, occupations, massacres and witch hunts in response to changing sides
- Damned if you do, damned if you don’t
- Starvation
- Displacement
- {Action bias - look active, even if it achieves nothing, foreign meddling, making things worse for countries who cannot defend themselves}
- South Korea refused to sign armistice
- Cannot be major voice within own country
- No official peace treaty
- Agreement to end Korean War in principle (2021)
social impact
- 300,000 killed or missing soldiers, 2M South Korean deaths incl. civilians, 1.5M North Korea, 1M Chinese
- Deep-rooted anger and hatred
- Solidifying anti-communism and support for US alliance
- Start of military conscription in both north and south
- Self-interest and family protection mentality
- Fear mistakes could lead to death
- Destruction of Confucian hierarchy
- Everything destroyed
- Must start from scratch
- Egalitarian — everyone is poor “great equalizer”
- Mass movement of people from North to South
- Increase in anti-communists and Christians
- Consolidation of division of the country
- Both sides use war to justify dictatorial rule
economic impact
- Destroyed Japanese infrastructure
- US pours aide into Korea
- Showcase for capitalistic dvelopment
- South Korea/US and North Korea economic competition
- Rhee squeezes money from US
- Uplifts Japanese economy
- War creates necessary export markets
- $3B spent in Japan for war supplies
- “Gift from the gods”
- For South Korea, Vietnam War played similar role
1948–1960 First Republic of Korea under Syngman Rhee
- Yeosu-Sucheon rebellions/massacres (Oct. 1948)
- Escalation of Jeju uprising/massacre (Oct. 1949 – Feb. 1949)
- Korean War
- Establishment of DMZ (1953-07-27)
- Botch use of US aid
- Failed economic policies
- Bloated policies
- Corruption
- Rigs election to get VP candidate in power
- e.g.
- Ballot stuffing
- Buried ballots
- Thugs
- → April Revolution (April 19, 1960)
- Succeed in overthrowing government
- Poverty
- Anti-communism
- National Security Law (1948)
- Suppression of free speech for national security
- Censorship
- Limited speech
- Harsh punishment
- Post-publication censorship
- Mass demonstrations at end
1960–1961 Second Republic of Korea under Yun Boseon
- Growth of union membership
- Opening of press
- Censorship
- Free speech
- No censorship
- Mass demonstrations
- Purging corrupt police
- Protests
- Speaking out about massacres
- Later characterized as “political chaos”
- Rationale for military control
- Democratic junctures
- Moving toward full democratization
1961–1963 military rule under Park Chung-hee
- Coup d’état 1961-05-16
- Martial law
- Creation of Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA) (June 1961)
- Known for repression and economic development
- 1st Five Year Economic Development Plan (1962–1966)
- Ideology: democracy vs. economic stability
- Dictator-like figures seen as more stable
- Issue with democracy
- Can elect someone who installs chaos
- Potential for overturning international alliances
- Thus US sometimes supports military dictatorships
- Censorship
- No free speech
- Harsh
- Demonstrations not permitted
1963 – 1972 Third Republic under Park Chung-hee
- Free elections
- US does not want to support military dictatorship on surface
- Pressure and threat to withdraw aid
- Barely wins
- More free in terms of political speech
- Before true dictatorship
- Japan Normalization Treaty (June 1965)
- 2nd Five Year Economic Development Plan (1967–1971)
- Vietnam War (1964–1973)
- Send troops
- Money they receive helps economic development
- Jointly contributed atrocities
- Blue House Raid (1968-01-21): North Korea attempt to assassinate Park
- Turning point toward dictatorial leadership
- New Village Movement (1971–mid 1980s)
- Cornerstone of economic policies
- Supporting big industries
- Develop local villages
- Censorship at the beginning
- Intermittent free speech
- Limited censorship
- Mass demonstrations for Korea-Japan Normalization Treaty
- After constitutional revision in 1969
- Limited speech
- Pre-publication censorship
- Minor demonstrations
1972–1979 Fourth Republic under Park Chung-hee
- Yushin Constitution (authoritarian rule) (Oct 1972)
- Amends constitution for indefinite power
- 3rd Five Year Economic Development Plan (1972–1976) and 4th (1977–1981)
- Labor and student unrest
- Violent repression of protests/leaders
- Strict censorship
- No free speech
- Strict pre-censorship
- Violent repression of protests and speech
- Economic development takes off
- Assassinated by KCIA director Kim Jae-gyu (1979-10-26)
1980–1984
- Censorship
- No free speech
- Harsh pre-censorship
- Violent repression of protests, speech
1985–1987
- Democratization
- Asian games
- Olympics 1988
- Desire for image projected