Imagined Germany and the Battle of Models in South Korea: Rival Narratives of Germany in South Korean Public Spheres, 1990–2015

This article explores interpretive practices and discursive arguments that mediate transnational influences. In South Korea, a growth-oriented economy, competitive democracy, and an antagonistic relationship with North Korea developed during the Cold War era under the strong influence of the U.S. an...

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Veröffentlicht in:German politics and society 2020-09, Vol.38 (3), p.113-134
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description This article explores interpretive practices and discursive arguments that mediate transnational influences. In South Korea, a growth-oriented economy, competitive democracy, and an antagonistic relationship with North Korea developed during the Cold War era under the strong influence of the U.S. and Japan. This study analyzes how Germany-a country that is regarded as an exemplary case for a social market economy, consensus democracy, and successful national reunification-was imagined as a model for reform. By analyzing editorials and opinion articles published in major Korean newspapers, this article investigates the aspects of Germany that Korean elites paid attention to and the narratives that they constructed about Germany. The results show that competing Korean elites produced different German narratives and "German models," leading to the integration of these competing models into conflicts surrounding South Korea's future.
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source EBSCOhost Political Science Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; JSTOR
subjects 20th century
Authoritarianism
Cold War
Culture
Democracy
Democratization
Dictators
Economic growth
Editorials
Elite (Social sciences)
Elites
Free markets
Hegemony
Influence
Market economies
Modernity
Modernization
Narratives
Political activity
Political development
Politics
Power
Reunification
Society
Sociology
Transnationalism
World War II
title Imagined Germany and the Battle of Models in South Korea: Rival Narratives of Germany in South Korean Public Spheres, 1990–2015
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