Author: Zhan Xiaohong
Basic Information Publishing House: Shandong People's Publishing House
Page number: 209 page number
ISBN:7209036385
Bar code: 9787209036382
Version: February 2005, version 1.
Binding: paperback
Format: 16 format
-
brief Introduction of the content
Now that the Korean Wave is rolling in China, Kazakhstan and Korea have become fashionable, and some people curse South Korea. But what is the real Korea like? The author of this book is here to tell you the real Korea with his own personal experience. The author visited and lectured in Korea for more than a year, and made profound observation, thinking and research on Korean society, economy and culture. He has long written articles commenting on South Korea in well-known domestic media such as Looking at Oriental Weekly, Window to the South and Economist Teahouse. This book deals with the impeachment of the president, parliamentary elections, hostage murder, and the storm of moving the capital. It records the development and twists and turns of Sino-Korean relations, the joy of the rapid economic and trade development between China and South Korea, the pride of the "Korean Wave" sweeping the Korean Peninsula, and the worries about the twists and turns of bilateral relations caused by agricultural trade and Koguryo historical issues. It tries to objectively introduce a real Korea to the domestic intellectual public: multi-party politics, macroeconomics, Korean diplomacy and big country encirclement diplomacy. This book is the first diary book written by economists after a long-term field trip to South Korea.
-
Brief introduction of the author
Zhan Xiaohong, 1956, a native of Jiangxi, is a researcher at the Institute of Economics of China Academy of Social Sciences, the deputy editor of Economic Research and the executive editor of Economist Teahouse, and is known as "land insurance" in economics. He has long been concerned about the study of North Korea. From 2003 to 2004, he visited and lectured in Korea for one year. During his stay in Korea, he wrote a large number of articles introducing Korean politics, economy, society, culture and history, which were published in major newspapers and periodicals in China and received great response.
-
Media recommendation
book review
Some people envy South Korea, some people scold South Korea, but what is the real South Korea like? Zhan Xiaohong, a researcher at China Academy of Social Sciences, used his diary to record what he saw, heard and thought, and told you the real South Korea with his personal experience.
-
Editor's recommendation
Now that the Korean Wave is rolling in China, Kazakhstan and Korea have become fashionable, and some people curse South Korea. But what is the real Korea like? The author of this book is here to tell you the real Korea with his own personal experience. The author visited and lectured in Korea for more than a year, and made profound observation, thinking and research on Korean society, economy and culture. He has long written articles commenting on South Korea in well-known domestic media such as Looking at Oriental Weekly, Window to the South and Economist Teahouse. This book deals with the impeachment of the president, parliamentary elections, hostage murder, and the storm of moving the capital. It records the development and twists and turns of Sino-Korean relations, the joy of the rapid economic and trade development between China and South Korea, the pride of the "Korean Wave" sweeping the Korean Peninsula, and the worries about the twists and turns of bilateral relations caused by agricultural trade and Koguryo historical issues. It tries to objectively introduce a real Korea to the domestic intellectual public: multi-party politics, macroeconomics, Korean diplomacy and big country encirclement diplomacy. This book is the first diary book written by economists after a long-term field trip to South Korea.
-
catalogue
order
On the eve of going to Korea
Arrive in Korea
Beautiful North Korea University
Long-lost pastoral life
Graduated from Fudan University as "Time Lecturer".
-
abstract
Experience the campus politics of Korean universities
Thursday, September 25th, 2003 is fine.
There are four classes in the morning, two in Grade Three (1) and two in Grade Two (2). These two classes have higher Chinese level and are easier to teach, but there are also differences. Most students who enrolled before 2000 went to China to study Chinese for half a year or even a year. Students enrolled in 200 1 have never been to China to study Chinese, and their performance in class can be described as distinct. Those students who have never been to China, although they are third-year students of Chinese Department, have difficulty in reading a text. Those who have studied Chinese in China have difficulty communicating with me.
It's not too big.
I have been here for almost a month, but I still don't know much about campus culture. I always go to school early in class, and I see various slogans, advertisements, exhibitions and banners on campus from the beginning of school. I really want to know what it is, but it's all in Korean. I have long heard that Korean universities are particularly active in political activities, and we cannot easily give up the opportunity of field trips because we don't know Korean. In the afternoon, I asked a boy to show me around the campus. The content of slogans and posters on campus can be described as varied: most of them vent anti-American sentiment and some anti-Japanese remarks. In front of the student union of the Institute of Technology, I saw a row of billboards with many pictures on them. There are two photos of the girl who was run over by an American tank last year. There is a photo of a Korean farmer named Li Jinghai, who committed suicide by caesarean section when she opposed globalization and was asked to open the agricultural market in South Korea. There are students voting whether South Korea should send troops to Iraq to maintain order (the opponents are overwhelming), and there are slogans on topics such as environmental protection and women's rights. But advocating and calling for the reunification of the North and the South is the most important content. There are many pictures on campus of the historic meeting between President Kim Dae-jung, the leader of North and South Korea, and Kim Jong Il two years ago, all of which regard the United States as the chief culprit hindering the reunification of North and South.
I saw two English slogans: "fucking U.S.A" and "One Corea" on the party stage of the Art College Student Union. The front slogan is aimed at the United States, and the back slogan is aimed at Japan. According to my students, before Japan occupied KOREA in 19 10, North Korea's English name was "COREA", but because this English name ranked before "Japan" in the international rankings, Japanese colonialists forcibly changed it to "Korea", and recently a movement to correct this name is in full swing in South Korea. From these campus activities, we can see that South Korea is a country with strong national pride and college students have strong national cohesion. Most of them sympathize with the present situation of the Korean people, and almost no one will gloat. I think it is a matter of time before the two Koreas are reunified, because the people in the north and the south have a high sense of identity with one Korea. College students (in fact, the same is true of university professors) think that the six-party talks on the DPRK nuclear issue are pure nonsense. Other countries only care about their own interests, and will not consider the interests of the people of North and South Korea at all. Only the North and the South will care about their own national affairs. They were very bitter about the war in the 1950s, and thought that the resulting national division was the North-South politics at that time.