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The two Koreas : a contemporary history  Cover Image Book Book

The two Koreas : a contemporary history / Don Oberdorfer and Robert Carlin.

Oberdorfer, Don. (Author). Carlin, Robert, 1947- (Added Author).

Summary:

"Ever since Korea was first divided at the end of World War II, the tension between its northern and southern halves has riveted-and threatened to embroil-the rest of the world. In this landmark history, now thoroughly revised and updated in conjunction with Korea expert Robert Carlin, veteran journalist Don Oberdorfer grippingly describes how a historically homogenous people became locked in a perpetual struggle for supremacy-and how they might yet be reconciled"-- Provided by publisher.
"A new edition of the definitive overview of contemporary Korean history, updated with new material to account for recent, dramatic events"-- Provided by publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780465031238 (pbk.)
  • ISBN: 0465031234 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description: xix, 519 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, map ; 24 cm
  • Edition: Revised and updated third edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Basic Books, A member of the Perseus Books Group, [2014]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 473-504) and index.
Formatted Contents Note:
1 Where the Wild Birds Sing 1 -- The Emergence of Two Koreas 2 -- War and Its Aftermath 6 -- The Origins of Negotiation 9 -- Kim II Sung 13 -- Conversations with the South 18 -- 2 The End of the Beginning 22 -- Park Chung Hee 25 -- Washington Blinks at Park's Coup 30 -- The Impact of Yashin 33 -- 3 The Trouble Deepens 39 -- Tensions Increase 40 -- The Struggle with Japan 42 -- The Underground War 45 -- Challenge from the North 47 -- Echoes of Saigon 52 -- The South Korean Nuclear Weapons Program 55 -- Murder in me Demilitarized Zone 59 -- 4 The Carter Chill 67 -- Carter's Withdrawal: Origins and Implementation 68 -- The View from Pyongyang 75 -- End of the Carter Withdrawal 80 -- 5 Assassination and Aftermath 87 -- Growing Domestic Tensions 89 -- The Coming of Chun Doo Hwan 92 -- The Kwangju Uprising 98 -- The Fight to Save Kim Dae Jung 105 -- 6 Terror and Talk 109 -- The Negotiating Track 112 -- Floods and Face-to-Face Talks 115 -- Kim II Sung and the Soviet Connection 119 -- 7 The Battle for Democracy in Seoul 126 -- Chun's Succession Struggle 126 -- The Election of 1987 135 -- 8 The Great Olympic Coming-Out Party 140 -- The Coming of the Olympics 140 -- The Bombing of KAL Flight 858 144 -- The Rise of Nordpolitik 146 -- Washington Launches a Modest Initiative 150 -- 9 Moscow Switches Sides 154 -- The Roots of Change 156 -- Gorbachev Meets Roh 159 -- The Shevardnadze Mission 165 -- "How Long Will the Red Flag Fly?" 169 -- Soviet-South Korean Economic Negotiations 175 -- 10 China Shifts its Ground 178 -- A Visit to North Korea 180 -- China Changes Course 186 -- 11 Joining the Nuclear Issue 194 -- The Origins of the Nuclear Program 196 -- Nuclear Diplomacy: The American Weapons 198 -- First Steps 200 -- The December Accords 203 -- Meeting in New York 207 -- The Coming of the Inspectors 208 -- First Inspections 209 -- From Accommodation to Crisis 212 -- 12 Withdrawal and Engagement 219 -- The Light-Water-Reactor Plan 224 -- Kim Young Sam Blows the Whistle 228 -- The Season of Crisis Begins 232 -- 13 Showdown Over Nuclear Weapons 239 -- The Defueling Crisis 240 -- The Military Track 244 -- The Deepening Conflict 248 -- Carter in Pyongyang 256 -- 14 Death and Accord 265 -- The End of an Era 268 -- The Succession of Kim Jong Il 271 -- The Framework Negotiations 274 -- Fallout from the Agreed Framework 280 -- The Kim Jong Il Regime 281 -- Visit to Pyongyang 283 -- The Struggle over the Reactors 285 -- 15 North Korea in Crisis 289 -- Political Earthquake in Seoul 295 -- Summit Diplomacy and the Four-Party Proposal 299 -- The Submarine Incursion 302 -- North Korea's Steep Decline 308 -- The Passage of Hwang Jang Yop 312 -- The Two Koreas in Time of Trouble 316 -- 16 Turn Toward Engagement 319 -- Into the Heavens, Under the Earth 319 -- Toward an Aid-Based State 323 -- Perry to the Rescue 326 -- Toward the June Summit 330 -- Summit in Pyongyang 335 -- Engaging the United States 340 -- 17 The End of the Agreed Framework 347 -- A Rocky Start 350 -- The Impact of 9/11 356 -- Threads Come Together: Japan-North Korea Talks 359 -- Slouching Toward the Cliff 362 -- Kim Jong Il's Progress 364 -- The Unquiet Americans 366 -- The Morning After 372 -- 18 Trouble in the Us-Rok Alliance 381 -- Problems for Diplomacy 382 -- Sunshine, Barely 385 -- Tensions Rise 392 -- The Six-Party Mirage 395 -- Nuclear Peek-a-Boo 398 -- A Year of Zigzags 400 -- The End of KEDO 411 -- Traction, at Last 413 -- Rumble in Punggye 416 -- 19 The Emperor's New Clothes 419 -- Signs of Succession 424 -- Diplomatic Downturn 427 -- A Terrible Start 431 -- Clinton's Visit 435 -- Turning to the South 437 -- A Second North-South Summit, but Not a Third 439 -- Secret Talks, Public Clashes 443 -- The Rise of Chinese Influence 446 -- Rare Backlash 449 -- Yeonpyeong Island 451 -- Kim Jong Il's Death and Beyond 452 -- The New Look 456.
Subject: Korea (South) > History.
Korea (North) > History.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Kirtland Community College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Kirtland Community College Library DS 922.2 .O24 2014 30775305499312 General Collection Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9780465031238
The Two Koreas : A Contemporary History
The Two Koreas : A Contemporary History
by Oberdorfer, Don; Carlin, Robert
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Kirkus Review

The Two Koreas : A Contemporary History

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

An old Asia hand offers a briefing that's more notable for the breadth than for the depth with which it addresses the issues still dividing North from South Korea. Oberdorfer (The Turn, 1991, etc.) starts his narrative in 1972, the first time that Pyongyang representatives had openly visited Seoul since the peninsular country was partitioned in the wake of WW II, and then reviews the ongoing negotiations on reunification. The author (a former Far East correspondent for the Washington Post) goes on to detail the South's blood-sport approach to politics at a time when the continued presence of Kim Il Sung lent the North a measure of stability. By way of example, the KCIA gunned down Park Chung Hee, opening the way for Chun Do Hwan. Following deadly riots in 1987, another would-be strongman, Roh Tae Woo, bested reformers Kim Dae Jung and Kim Young Sam for the presidency, leaving him to oversee the 1988 Olympiad successfully staged in Seoul. In the meantime, Beijing gave Seoul a jolt, following Moscow's lead and establishing diplomatic relations with South Korea. Shortly before the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's founding father died in mid-1994, the wider world and Washington became gravely concerned about the Red state's nuclear capabilities. Jimmy Carter helped avert a full-blown crisis, however, and Kim's son (Kim Jong Il), who inherited an economy on the rocks, is coping as best he can with famine and a host of other daunting internal problems. Yet the impoverished North continues its efforts to subvert the flourishing South. Even so, Oberdorfer is reluctant to predict whether, let alone when, the two Koreas will be reunited. Indeed, he exits on the breezy note that there's no telling what may happen in a country so full of surprises. A fine overview of Korea's recent past, which will leave most readers frustrated by its lack of analysis on what might lie ahead for this divided nation. (b&w photos, not seen)

Syndetic Solutions - CHOICE_Magazine Review for ISBN Number 9780465031238
The Two Koreas : A Contemporary History
The Two Koreas : A Contemporary History
by Oberdorfer, Don; Carlin, Robert
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CHOICE_Magazine Review

The Two Koreas : A Contemporary History

CHOICE


Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.

For Americans, Korea takes on special importance, not only because of the vicious war of 1950-1953 but also because so many US soldiers are still there. Any hostilities on the Korean peninsula would instantly involve the US. During a 1993 visit President Clinton called the DMZ (Demilitarized Zone) separating the two Korean states "the scariest place on earth." Oberdorfer, a veteran journalist, knows his subject well and from firsthand experience. He offers the reader an excellent briefing, with much fresh, even exciting, information on Korean foreign policy (north and south) over the past 28 years or so. The book unfolds in a series of episodes not always smoothly fused (a sharp editorial touch would have removed repetitions), with the emphasis strongly on politics, although Korea's remarkable economic growth is constantly given mention. The author does not conceal his opinions, but they do not shape the material. He informs rather than lectures. Oberdorfer's style is descriptive rather than analytical; the result is a highly readable book, attractive to someone who a quick and informed introduction to an intricate and important subject. General readers; undergraduates. J. C. Perry Tufts University

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 9780465031238
The Two Koreas : A Contemporary History
The Two Koreas : A Contemporary History
by Oberdorfer, Don; Carlin, Robert
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Library Journal Review

The Two Koreas : A Contemporary History

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Oberdorfer first toured Korea in 1953 courtesy of the U.S. Army and returned often on the Asia beat for the Washington Post. In the present volume, his accounts of the conflicts of the last 20 years, appraisals of leaders based on interviews in Korea, Japan, Washington, and Moscow, and incisive policy analysis form a detailed and insightful history of North and South Korean politics and U.S. policy. Particularly engrossing is the analysis of relations between Moscow and Washington and their defiant clients, which turned domestic rifts into world conflict from the 1950s through the potentially nuclear crisis of 1994 and the present famine. The obvious comparison is with Bruce Cumings's commanding Korea's Place in the Sun: A Modern History (LJ 2/15/97). Cumings analyzes the evolution and nature of Korea's political economy over the last few centuries. Oberdorfer brings to life the events, leaders, and decisions of the last 20 years. Larger public and academic collections will want both volumes.‘Charles Hayford, Evanston, Ill. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


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