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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
이하나 (연세대학교)
저널정보
역사비평사 역사비평 역사비평 2015년 가을 호(통권 112호)
발행연도
2015.8
수록면
372 - 411 (42page)

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The aim of this paper is to elucidate the unique cultural affects created in South Korean society under the conditions of the Cold War and national division. Despite the historical detente of the late 1960s and mid-1970s, the cementing of South and North Korea’s institutions raises the need to consider a perspective wherein South and North Korea were actors in instigating an ‘excessive Cold War’ rather than the Korean peninsula being a ‘mini-Cold War’ between the US and USSR. Although the ‘excessive Cold War’ greatly restricted all of society and escalated the fever to “ferret out the enemy,” the excessive rules and restrictions inadvertently also had the problematic side effect of triggering affects. Non-fiction spy narratives based on true stories and testimonies produced and circulated during the late 1960s to 1970s not only included spies during the national division of Korea, but internationally active spies from the World Wars I, II, and the Cold War. The most frequently appearing narratives in popular culture were those of the female spy, the converted spy, and the double agent. These narratives demonstrate the polarization and structuring of historicism, testimonies, and gendered strategies, especially the anti-North Korean Orientalism containing both Orientalism and exoticism based on love, hate, and sympathy. This narrative strategy shared some similarities with that of Western spy narratives and were relatively more overt in their portrayals of temptation and fear of direct contact with the ‘enemy.’ Hence the spy narrative was not merely a narrative of exclusion but also a dual narrative involving the coexistence of complex and subtle affects such as sympathy and hatred, temptation and insecurity. The 1970 spy narratives adopted the sensationalism that was all the rage in the media as their selling point, spinning tales of sympathy and hatred for the spy representing ‘our pitiful compatriots moaning in North Korea’ and ‘South Korea, the victor in the contest for legitimacy.’ Though the excessive Cold War gave birth to an extreme anticommunism and North-South hostility blaming all of society’s ills on North Korea and communism, the spy narrative also showed the paradoxical temptation and insecurity at the base of South Korean society.

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머리말
1. 논픽션 시대와 대중문화에서의 첩보전
2. 간첩/첩보 서사의 계보와 전략
3. 냉전문화의 이중적 감수성
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참고문헌
Abstract

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