政治是个人——76名前往中立国的韩国战俘形象的变化

Jung Byung Joon
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引用次数: 1

摘要

根据朝鲜战争停战协定,战俘可以拒绝遣返。绝大多数未被遣返的人去了朝鲜、中国或台湾。但是由76名韩国士兵和12名中国士兵组成的小组选择前往中立国。本文考察了韩国关于这些异常大国的论述在过去几十年里发生了怎样的变化。一个早期的假设是,他们做出了一个原则性的、意识形态上的决定,拒绝全球冷战的两个集团。但他们选择中立国与其说是出于意识形态,不如说是出于个人原因。他们的反共产主义似乎是沉默的,因为他们也避开了另一方。这种解释几乎不包含对战俘本身的直接了解;这更多地取决于韩国民众如何看待这场摧毁朝鲜半岛的战争。韩国知识界和大众媒体对这些朝鲜囚犯的理解也受到了《广场》的影响。苏联集团解体后,韩国人对与朝鲜的竞争变得更加自信。这让人们重新想起了那些拒绝了朝鲜半岛的战俘,这让拒绝共产主义的朝鲜变得更有说服力,他们拒绝留在韩国的问题也减少了。
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The Political Was Personal: Shifting Images of 76 Korean pow s Who Went to Neutral Nations
Under the terms of the Korean War armistice, prisoners of war (pow s) could reject repatriation. The vast majority of non-repatriates went to either of the Koreas, China, or Taiwan. But a small group consisting of 76 Korean and twelve Chinese pow s exercised their option to go to neutral nations instead. This article examines how South Korean discourse about these outlier pow s shifted over the decades. An early assumption was that they had made a principled, ideological decision to reject both blocs of a global Cold War. But their choice of neutral countries was a more personal than ideological one. Their anti-communism appeared muted, since they also eschewed the other side. This interpretation contained little direct knowledge of the pow s themselves; it owed more to how the South Korean public saw the war that devastated their peninsula. There also was the influence of “The Square” in the Korean intellectual society and the mass media in their understanding of these Korean prisoners. After the collapse of the Soviet bloc, South Koreans became more confident about the rivalry with North Korea. This led to a reengagement with the memory of the pow s who had spurned both Koreas, making rejection of Communist North Korea more convincing and their refusal to remain in South Korea was less problematic.
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