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2. Respatializing Chosŏn’s Royal Capital The Politics of Japanese Urban Reforms in Early Colonial Seoul, 1905–1919
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- 1. Introduction — Constructed Places, Contested Spaces Critical Geographies and Korea 1
-
Part 1: Geographies of the (Colonial) City
- 2. Respatializing Chosŏn’s Royal Capital The Politics of Japanese Urban Reforms in Early Colonial Seoul, 1905–1919 15
- 3. Demolishing Colony The Demolition of the Old Government-General Building of Chosŏn 39
-
Part 2: Geographies of the ( Imagined ) Village
- 4. Chosŏn Memories Spectatorship, Ideology, and the Korean Folk Village 61
- 5. Blame Walt Rostow The Sacrifice of South Korea’s Natural Villages 83
-
Part 3: Geographies of Religion
- 6. Auspicious Places in a Mobile Landscape Of Shamans, Shrines, and Dreams 101
- 7. Kyeryong Mountain as a Contested Place 121
- 8. Kyŏngju Namsan Heterotopia, Place-Agency, and Historiographic Leverage 141
-
Part 4 :Geographies of the Margin
- 9. The Seoul Train Station Square and Homeless Shelters Thoughts on Geographical History Regarding Welfare Citizenship 159
- 10. Cyberspace and a Space for Gays in South Korea 173
- 11. Marginality, Transgression, and Transnational Identity Negotiations in Korea’s Kijich’on 186
- Works Cited 205
- Contributors 229
- Index 231
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- 1. Introduction — Constructed Places, Contested Spaces Critical Geographies and Korea 1
-
Part 1: Geographies of the (Colonial) City
- 2. Respatializing Chosŏn’s Royal Capital The Politics of Japanese Urban Reforms in Early Colonial Seoul, 1905–1919 15
- 3. Demolishing Colony The Demolition of the Old Government-General Building of Chosŏn 39
-
Part 2: Geographies of the ( Imagined ) Village
- 4. Chosŏn Memories Spectatorship, Ideology, and the Korean Folk Village 61
- 5. Blame Walt Rostow The Sacrifice of South Korea’s Natural Villages 83
-
Part 3: Geographies of Religion
- 6. Auspicious Places in a Mobile Landscape Of Shamans, Shrines, and Dreams 101
- 7. Kyeryong Mountain as a Contested Place 121
- 8. Kyŏngju Namsan Heterotopia, Place-Agency, and Historiographic Leverage 141
-
Part 4 :Geographies of the Margin
- 9. The Seoul Train Station Square and Homeless Shelters Thoughts on Geographical History Regarding Welfare Citizenship 159
- 10. Cyberspace and a Space for Gays in South Korea 173
- 11. Marginality, Transgression, and Transnational Identity Negotiations in Korea’s Kijich’on 186
- Works Cited 205
- Contributors 229
- Index 231