废墟,记忆和充满活力的物质:想象未来的朝鲜农村地形

IF 0.3 0 ASIAN STUDIES European Journal of Korean Studies Pub Date : 2019-10-01 DOI:10.33526/ejks.20191901.87
R. Winstanley-Chesters
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引用次数: 1

摘要

考虑到最近批判地理学和人文地理学以及哲学领域关于政治生活和废墟网络的工作,作为活跃的问题,在过程中和成为,本文从超越平壤现在的时间(和空间)框架考虑了朝鲜非城市景观的未来。随着朝鲜半岛现状的改变,我们现在所知道的朝鲜不复存在,国家官僚机构和大众文化力量将如何影响被朝鲜意识形态和政治文化严重改变的地区?转型后的力量是否会认为意识形态记忆的建筑完全被摧毁,试图在这些空间上书写自己的文化和记忆,或者改写之前的文化和记忆,共同在朝鲜半岛创造新的记忆景观?特别是,本文考察了朝鲜两个重要地点的物理和材料未来。首先,三池渊大纪念碑和三池湖白桦树,这是朝鲜对该地区军事斗争的历史叙述的代表,也是对金日成和他的第一任妻子金正淑关系的第一次承认。其次,论文考虑了白头山,特别是山下的秘密游击营地,以及金正日峰,金正日峰的一部分现在用巨大的朝鲜文写着金正日的签名。从某种意义上说,这两个地方,以及朝鲜更广阔的农村和野生空间,都因与平壤的政治叙事纠缠在一起而遭到破坏。然而,在他们的毁灭中,通过时间和文化政治重新配置的过程,本文看到了这种状态的拆解和解开。
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Ruins, Memory and Vibrant Matter: Imagining Future North Korean Rural Terrains
With recent work in mind from the fields of Critical and Human Geography and Philosophy on webs of political life and ruins as lively matters, in process and becoming the paper considers the futures for North Korean non-urban landscapes from a temporal (and spatial) frame beyond that of Pyongyang’s present. Following a change of status quo on the Korean Peninsula in which North Korea as we know now it ceases to exist, how will both state bureaucracy and popular cultural power impact on terrains so heavily transformed by the ideology and political culture of North Korea? Will post-transformation forces consider architectures of ideological memory entirely ruined, attempt to write their own cultures and memories on these spaces, or unwrite previous ones, co-producing new landscapes of memory on the Korean Peninsula? In particular, this paper examines the physical and material futures for two important sites in North Korea. Firstly, the Samjiyon Grand Monument and the Birch Trees of Lake Samji, representative within North Korea’s historical narrative of both military struggles in the area and the first acknowledgement of Kim Il Sung and his first wife, Kim Jong Suk’s relationship. Secondly the paper considers Mt. Paektu and very specifically the Secret Guerrilla Camp below it, and Jong Il Peak, part of the mountain now graced by Kim Jong Il’s signature written in huge Korean script. Both sites, along with North Korea’s wider rural and wild spaces are in a sense ruined by their enmeshing with the political narratives of Pyongyang. However, in their ruination the paper sees the unpicking and untwining of this state, through the processes of time and culturalpolitical re-configurations.
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CiteScore
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发文量
7
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