[KS] Photographs of Cheongyecheon in 1965, and other Seoul scenes

Dr. Edward D. Rockstein ed4linda at yahoo.com
Fri Mar 5 21:26:58 EST 2010


By the time I got to Seoul in 1967 Cheongyecheon was a road and I didn't realize it had only recently been covered over.  There were still many hovels, folks sleeping under bridges, "illegal" shacks constantly being pulled down by the police, young beggars on the streets who also sold cheap umbrellas whenever it rained for 70/80 weon. There were  hapseungs as well as cabs and buses. There were many street hawkers selling such things as adhesive tape and in winter things like hot chestnuts or roasted corn from small braziers.  There were still large buildings with bullet scars. But things were changing rapidly. Ed R.

Dr. Edward D. Rockstein 

ed4linda at yahoo.com  

”  Politics is the womb in which war develops. ” — Karl von Clausewitz


--- On Fri, 3/5/10, don kirk <kirkdon at yahoo.com> wrote:

From: don kirk <kirkdon at yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [KS] Photographs of Cheongyecheon in 1965, and other Seoul scenes
To: "Korean Studies Discussion List" <koreanstudies at koreaweb.ws>
Date: Friday, March 5, 2010, 1:12 PM

Thanks for these -- really interesting. Hard to believe Cheongyecheon was like that. Looks like sights I've seen in Manila.
Best,
Don

--- On Fri, 3/5/10, Afostercarter at aol.com <Afostercarter at aol.com> wrote:

From: Afostercarter at aol.com <Afostercarter at aol.com>
Subject: [KS] Photographs of Cheongyecheon in 1965, and other Seoul scenes
To: Koreanstudies at koreaweb.ws
Date: Friday, March 5, 2010, 7:57 AM



 

Apologies to those on the ASCK and BAKS lists for 
cross-posting. 
 
Dear friends and colleagues,

 
Sorry if this is old hat. But some 
remarkable photographs of 

an impoverished Cheongyecheon in 1965 - and a wealth of
other images of Seoul in the 1950s-70s - can be found here:
http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=611726&page=4
 

Many thanks to Tom Coyner and Alan 
Timblick for the link.
 
Already by 1982, when I first visited, there were 
no
scenes remotely resembling this. The 
extraordinary
pace of change in modern South Korea may be a cliché ,
but so stark a visual reminder can still make you 
gasp.
 
Belated Samil greetings to one and all,
 
Aidan
 

Aidan Foster-Carter 
Honorary Senior Research Fellow in Sociology 
& Modern Korea, Leeds University, UK 
 
  
Flat 1, 40 Magdalen Road, 
Exeter, Devon, EX2 4TE, England, UK 
T: (+44, no 0)    07970 741307 (mobile);   01392 257753       Skype: Aidan.Foster.CarterE: afostercarter at aol.com,     afostercarter at yahoo.com            W: www.aidanfc.net
 
 


      
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