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Why was Korea separated? Why have the Koreans been unable to overcome the line of demarcation separating them over the last 60 years? Why did the Korean War break out? Many scholars studying contemporary Korean history have been conducting a detailed analysis of these very subjects. Traditionalists tend to place blame on the Communist Bloc, including Soviet Russia, while revisionists see the responsibility lying with United States anticommunist imperialism. Throughout this controversial process, Korean scholars have been neglectful of a self in dealing with these issues. Based on historicism, this book considers at its core a series of tragic Korean historical events as civil or internal conflicts and aims to reflect on Koreas own historical mistakes and errors. In this respect, this study can be categorized as being rerevisionist. This book was written with the conviction that the Korean Peninsula was not divided by other, external powers but separated from within.
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Preface to the English Edition
Preface
Acknowledgement
Abbreviation
Remarks for Romanization of Korean Characters and Bibliography
Chapter 1. Introduction
Points of View and Methodology of Contemporary Korean History
1. Introduction: What is the Significance of the Term Contemporary History?
2. Trends and Dynamics in the Study of Korean Separation
1) The Scientific Quest of the Young Historians
2) The Lessons of Korean-American Relations
3) The U.S. National Archives Documents Released
4) The Democratization Movement in South Korea
5) The Collapse of the USSR and the East European Socialist Countries
6) The Development of the Copy Machine
3. Points of View on the Separation: Causes or Responsibilities?
1) Were the Major Powers Responsible?
2) Wasnt Korea Responsible?
3) Liberation from the 'History of Attribution'
4. Conclusion: Return to Historicism
Part I. The Age of Sterility
Chapter 2. The Decision Process of the Separation of the Korean Peninsula
Focusing on the U.S. Role and Its Change
1. Introduction
2. Korean Problems on the Conference Table during World War II
1) The Washington Conference (March 27, 1943)
2) The Cairo Conference (November 22-26, 1943)
3) The Teheran Conference (November 27-December 2, 1943)
4) The Yalta Conference (January 30-February 11, 1945)
5) The Stalin-Hopkins Meeting in Moscow (May 26-June 6, 1945)
6) The Potsdam Conference (July 6-August 1, 1945)
7) The Council of Foreign Ministers in London (September 12-October 2, 1945)
3. Factors Influencing the U.S. Foreign Policy toward Separation of the Korean Peninsula
1) The U.S. Lack of Information and Imperialist Arrogance
2) The U.S. Overestimated Russias Capacity to End the War
3) The U.S. Satiation from the Occupation of Japanese Islands
4) The Decline of China in the International Circle
5) Discordance among the U.S. Decision-Makers on Separation of the Korean Peninsula
4. Several Devices to Divide the Korean Peninsula
1) The OPD, Department of War
2) The Joint War Plans Committee (JWPC)
3) The SWNCC
4) The Proposed Military Occupation by JWPC
5) The CINCPAC
6) The OPD, Revised
5. Process of Demarcation on the 38th Parallel
6. Conclusion
Chapter 3. The Decision Process of the Trusteeship
Focusing on the Change of U.S. Ideas
1. Introduction
2. Factors in the U.S. Policy in Deciding the Trusteeship
1) FDR's Ideals as a Neo-Wilsonian
2) Experiences in the Philippines
3) Anti-Colonial Trends in the U.S.
4) Ensuring One Power Does Not Gain Dominance
3. Standpoints of the USSR, the United Kingdom, and China
1) Response of the USSR
2) Standpoint of United Kingdom
3) Standpoint of China
4. Change in the Trusteeship Policy
1) Change of Presidency in the U.S. and Beginning of the Cold War
2) Success of the Atomic Bomb
3) Anti-Trusteeship Movement in South Korea
4) Change of USSR Policy
5. Conclusion
Chapter 4. The Policy of the U.S. Army Military Government in Korea
The First Year
1. Introduction
2. Direction of Military Government
3. Enforcement of Occupation
4. Early Stage of Military Government
5. Conclusion
Chapter 5. The Structure of the U.S. Army Military Government in Korea
1. Introduction
2. The United States Army Military Government (USAMGIK)
3. The Police
4. The Military
5. Auxiliary Organization: Northwest Young Association (NWYA)
6. Conclusion
Chapter 6. Disposition of Vestiges of the Japanese Colonial Rule
1. Introduction
2. Repatriation of the Japanese People
3. Activities of New Korean Company (NKC)
1) Management of the Enemy Properties
2) Gathering of Tenants
4. Activities of the Central Land Administration
5. Confusion of the Attempted Land Reform
6. Conclusion
Chapter 7. Conflicts between the U.S. Army Military Government and the Korean People
1. Introduction
2. Conflicts with Eminent Persons of the Provisional Government
3. Response to the Leftists
1) Composition and Characteristics of the Leftist Groups
2) USAMGIKs Perception of the Leftists
3) The Counterfeit Money Incident of the Chosun Printing Company and the Suppression of Leftists
4. Conclusion
Chapter 8. Interim Legislative Assemblies under the Military Government
1. Introduction: USAMGIKs Perception of the Legislative Assembly
2. From the Supreme Political Committee of the Emergency National Congress to the Democratic Assembly
1) Advisory Council of the USAMGIK
2) Supreme Political Committee of the Emergency National Congress
3) Transfer to the Democratic Assembly
3. The Interim Legislative Assembly of South Korea
1) Background of the Composition
2) Election and Composition
3) Activities
4) Dissolution: Road to the Constitutional Assembly
5) Evaluation
4. Conclusion
Part II. The Gestation of Tragedies
Chapter 9. The Genesis of the Korean Communists
1. Introduction
2. Inspiration of the Russian October Revolution and Eastern Policy of the Comintern
3. Conflict on the Front Line for the Liberation
4. The Deepening of Social Inequality
5. The Communization of Mainland China
6. The Jacobin Mentality of the Revolutionary Age
7. Personal Disposition
8. Conclusion
Chapter 10. Disputes on Trusteeship, 1945-1947
1. Introduction
2. Moscow Agreements and America's Device
3. Logic of the Anti-Trusteeship
4. Logic of the Pro-Trusteeship
5. The Reasons Why the Left-wing Changed to Pro-Trusteeship
1) Hypothesis I: Direction from Moscow
2) Hypothesis II: Decision by Themselves
3) Hypothesis III: Struggle for Hegemony
6. Conclusion
Chapter 11. U.S.-USSR Joint Commission, 1946-1947
1. Introduction
2. Preliminary Meeting (January 16-February 6, 1946)
3. First Conference (March 20-May 9, 1946)
4. Adjournments and Quests (May 10, 1946-May 20, 1947)
5. Second Conference (May 21-October 18, 1947)
6. Conclusion: Who was Responsible for the Breaking of the Joint Commission?
Chapter 12. Conflicts within the Right-Wing
With a Focus upon the Relationship between Rhee Syng-man and Kim Koo
1. Introduction
2. Fatal Conflict: Differences of Social Status and School
3. Heterogeneity and Homogeneity of the Political Line
1) Bourgeoisie Democracy vs. Chauvinism
2) Pro-American Diplomacy vs. Terrorism
3) Confucian Authoritarianism vs. Equalitarianism
4) Anti-Russianism vs. Anti-Communism
4. Conflict in the Provisional Government
5. Conflict after the Liberation
1) The Purge of the Pro-Japanese Vestiges
2) Trusteeship Problem
3) Disputes on Establishment of a Separate Government in South Korea
6. Conclusion
Chapter 13. Conflicts within the Left-Wing<
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