Good book, but I had trouble getting into it. I'm not sure why. Compared to the other Korean book I've read this year (Seoul Man by Frank Ahrens) -- this one is much more informed about Korea, and the author has a lot more to say about it.... BUT it's also more of a slog to get through. Ahrens had the advantage of being new to the culture so was more focused on the elements of the culture that stood out.
This book is more amorphous. Is it a history? An examination of the culture? A study of its politics? A look at its economy? Yup. It's all of those things. But it's never standout on any of it. And it's often seems a little too generalized about what it's trying to get at, especially in the early chapters. There are some errors, too. He says China's first Olympics was in 1988. No, there were in LA in 1984. Well, that's minor. But he begins Chapter 12 by saying how Korea savored its chances in the new century. Um, I know somethings about East Asia in those years. Korea was already getting kicked around like a football between the main powers. It already had diminishing room to manuever.
Don't get me wrong. It's still a good book. I am giving it four stars, after all. But it can be annoying. (If I could give half-stars, this would be 3.5). There is some good info it. Some stray things that stuck with: the importance of the group dynamic and group orientation in Korea. There is an ongoing tradition of shamanism in Korea, and even a crackdown against it in the 1970s in South Korea. The movie The Admiral: Roaring Currents sounds interesting. Currently, they have the Sampo generation - people who have the three give ups: love, marriage, children. They just play video games. Syngman Rhee flatly defied the US on the 1953 armistice negotiation, but only agreed to keep his mouth shut in return for a defense treaty - and this worked out for him.
The section on WWII (p.161-64 in the hardcover book) is really strong. Millions of workers were uprooted. Korean was banned in the classroom in 1940 and they were all made to adopt Korean names. 360,000 served as either soldiers or civilian employees for the military. Japan states that 131,955 died in war service, and 21,000 are commemorated at the Yakusuni Shrine. 30,000 died in the nuclear bombings. Between 4 to 7.8 million were mobilized for war labor and 1/6 of Koreans lived in Japan or Japanese-controlled Asia as workers. Women were put in the Comfort Corps. Interestingly, people who lived through it seem less upset at Japan than those born later.
Korea's DMZ is supposed to be 4 kilometers wide but the North moved forward unilaterialy, but this violation is never mentioned and foreign press accounts of the DMZ repeat the official info, not the reality.
It's #1 in university entrance for its young (70.9%). It's #1 in shipbuilding, with the top four firms. It's #1 in TVs, home appliances, and 2nd in mobile devices and semiconductors. It's 9th in electricity generation, 4th in nuclear power production, and has the 2nd biggest carbon market (after the EU) imposing caps on emissions. But their likely to have a drop in people who can work.