ABSTRACT

The Kwangju Uprising that occurred in May 1980 is burned into the minds of South Koreans in much the same way that Tiananmen is burned into the minds of contemporary Chinese. As the world watched in horror following the assassination of President Park Chung Hee, student protesters were brutally suppressed by the military and police led by strongman Chun Doo Hwan. Kim Dae Jung, the current president of South Korea, was imprisoned and sentenced to death during this period.

This book recreates those earth-shaking events through eyewitness reports of leading Western correspondents on the scene as well as Korean participants and observers. Photographs, detailed street maps, and dramatic woodblock prints further illuminate the day-to-day drama to keep this atrocity alive in the conscience of the world.

part One

Two Korean Voices

part Two

The Foreign Press

chapter Three|10 pages

Remembering Kwangju

chapter Four|10 pages

A Nightmare in Broad Daylight

chapter Five|14 pages

I Bow My Head

chapter Six|10 pages

Reflections on Kwangju

part Three|90 pages

The Korean Press

chapter Ten|10 pages

An Editor's Woes

chapter Eleven|10 pages

How the Provincial Hall Was Taken

chapter Twelve|20 pages

Bang! Bang! Bang!

chapter Thirteen|14 pages

“Maybe I Was Too Young...”

chapter Fourteen|6 pages

A Photographer's Credo

chapter Fifteen|6 pages

“Not One Line...”

chapter Sixteen|6 pages

Kwangju, That Changed My Destiny

chapter Seventeen|14 pages

Kwangju Is Not over Yet

chapter |14 pages

Epilogue