ABSTRACT

Cinema has become a battleground upon which history is made—a major mass medium of the twentieth century dealing with history. The re-enactments of historical events in film straddle reality and fantasy, documentary and fiction, representation and performance, entertainment and education. This interdisciplinary book examines the relationship between film and history and the links between historical research and filmic (re-)presentations of history with special reference to South Korean cinema.

As with all national film industries, Korean cinema functions as a medium of inventing national history and identity, and also establishing their legitimacy—in both forgetting the past and remembering history. Korean films also play a part in forging cultural collective memory. Korea as a colonised and divided nation clearly adopted different approaches to the filmic depiction of history compared to colonial powers such as Western or Japanese cinema. The Colonial Period (1910–1945) and Korean War (1950–1953) draw particular attention as they have been major topics shaping the narrative of nation in North and South Korean films.

Exploring the changing modes, impacts and functions of screen images dealing with history in Korean cinema, this book will be of huge interest to students and scholars of Korean history, film, media and cultural studies.

 

 

chapter 1|14 pages

Cinematic Battlefield of Memory, Imagination, and Narrative of the Past

A Preface to Korean Film and History

part I|52 pages

Issues, Positions and Approaches to Historical Memory

chapter 2|16 pages

Making Nations

Film Propaganda in Colonial Korea and Nazi Germany

chapter 3|19 pages

Could History Films Be Rivals of Historians?

Historical Criticism Through History Films

chapter 4|15 pages

Writing a History Through Cinema

A Focus on Two 'Comfort Women' Films

part II|50 pages

Korean Cinema and the Colonial Period

chapter 5|18 pages

'Be a Soldier'

War and Melodrama in Late Colonial Korea 1

chapter 6|15 pages

Hyŏnhaet'an, Mon Amour

Colonial Memories and (In)visible Japan in 1960s South Korean Cinema

chapter 7|15 pages

Screening Collaboration

The Pro-Japanese Korean in 2009 Lost Memories and Modern Boy

part III|63 pages

How to Remember the Korean War, Its Origin and Aftermath

chapter 9|28 pages

Korean War Films

Generational Memory of North Korean Soldiers, Partisans, Brothers, and Women

chapter 10|19 pages

Between Protector and Oppressor

Representation of the United States as a Geopolitical Entity in Korean Blockbusters

part IV|33 pages

Archiving Contact Zones

chapter 11|17 pages

The Agonistics on the Borders In Between Two Koreas

The Politics of Cinematic Representations in Documentary Films on Borders Since 2018