[KS] Japan-Korea, France-Algeria: Colonialism and language policy

Frank Hoffmann hoffmann at koreanstudies.com
Sat Oct 26 21:50:19 EDT 2013


Dear Balazs:

Yes, certainly seems I did misread the point you made on Taiwan 
(thought indeed you were referring to colonial times).

The other argument, the one from the beginning of your LAST mail 
(quoted below), is really quite different from what you had written 
before and is nothing I responded to.

Thanks for clarifying.

Frank


On Sun, 27 Oct 2013 01:11:53 +0000 (GMT), Balazs Szalontai wrote:
> Dear Frank,
> 
> I think we are somewhat missing each other's messages. What I wanted 
> like to stress is that in post-colonial Korea, aversion to 
> metropolitan cultural and linguistic influence seems to have been 
> longer and more pronounced than in most other post-colonial societies 
> in Asia (and elsewhere). The first comparison was with Algeria, 
> following Dr. Babicz's lead. One cannot really see in post-colonial 
> Korea that wide social strata cannot expect a successful career if 
> they are not fluent in Japanese, and that the government 
> unsuccessfully tries to introduce wholesale Koreanization in 
> education and administration. The second was with Taiwan. I fully 
> agree with the point that in the colonial era, Taiwan also 
> experienced resistance. What I meant by "softened" reaction was that 
> the post-colonial authorities seem not to have pursued such a 
> systematic policy to bar the import of Japanese culture as their 
> South Korean counterparts (though I might be mistaken). Of course, 
> this may have been caused by other factors than the identity 
> question. For instance, the ROC could not really afford to alienate 
> Japan, having faced far more formidable diplomatic competition for 
> Japanese favors from the PRC than the ROK from the DPRK.  
> 
> All the best,
> Balazs  
> 

--------------------------------------
Frank Hoffmann
http://koreanstudies.com




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