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Here's a must read for anyone interested in Korean Politics:
Reading conservative or liberal commentators on Korea, expat bloggers, experts or professional journalists, one thing that irritates is the tendency to lump together the Korean left into an amorphous mass of crazed stick-wielding students with a grudge against all things American and bolshie workers and farmers, who probably get paid too much anyway (to be 'globally competitive' that is).
Some of these stereotypes may exist in real life (I dunno), but the Korean left is actually quite a diverse and rapidly changing place. In some ways this is nothing new as anyone who knows about the various factions of the 80s (handily denoted by easy-to-remember abbreviations like NL and PD) will know. But the biggest difference these days is that much of the left is no longer dominated by Stalinism of one form or another as it was 20 years ago. There are social democrats of various stripes, Trotskyists of different hues and, as the title of this post indicates, the current vogue for autonomism is also present on the Korean peninsula.
Let's hope Kotaji continues the series. Also reccomended is The Two South Koreas: A House Divided, and to balance things, from Korea Journal, The Dilemma of Korean Conservatism (subscription required).
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http://kr.blog.yahoo.com/kimcheegi/trackback/3/362
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Not all Korean lefties the same — MUST READ!!! [The Marmot's Hole] 2005.07.21 04:37
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Kotaji wants us all to know that the Korean left is more than just student radicals and protesting workers:
Reading conservative or liberal commentators on Korea, expat bloggers, experts or professional journalists, one thing that irritates is the t
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Where Is Korean Liberalism? [Barbarian Envoy] 2005.07.20 20:54
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Hahm Chaibong (via Budaechigae II) has another useful article on South Korean politics, specifically the development of the conservative and progressive factions from LIberation Day, 1945 to the present day. Without getting too bogged down in the pro
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